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Health, Income, and the Preston Curve: A Long View

Leandro Prados de la Escosura

No 17151, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: Well-being is increasingly viewed as a multidimensional phenomenon, of which income is only one facet. In this paper I focus on another one, health, and look at its synthetic measure, life expectancy at birth, and its relationship with per capita income. International trends of life expectancy and per capita GDP differed during the past 150 years. Life expectancy gains depended on economic growth but also on the advancement in medical knowledge. The pace and breadth of the health transitions drove life expectancy aggregate tendencies and distribution. The new results confirm the relationship between life expectancy and per capita income and its outward shift over time as put forward by Samuel Preston. However, the association between non-linearly transformed life expectancy and the log of per capita income does not flatten out over time, but becomes convex suggesting more than proportional increases in life expectancy at higher per capita income levels.

Keywords: Well-being; Life expectancy; Per capita income; Inequality; Health transition; Preston curve (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F60 I15 N30 O50 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022-03
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Related works:
Journal Article: Health, income, and the preston curve: A long view (2023) Downloads
Working Paper: Health, income, and the Preston Curve: a long view (2022) Downloads
Working Paper: Health, Income, and the Preston Curve: A Long View (2022) Downloads
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