dc.description.abstract | The paper examines the relationship between health status and economic growth
in Africa over the period 1960-2000. Between 1960 and 1970s, health status in
many African countries expanded rapidly, slowed down in the 1980s, and
declined in the mid-1990s. Except for the 1980-95 period, when health indicators
in Africa improved as growth declined, their trend in other periods mimicked
economic performance in the region. By the end of 1990s, health indicators for
many African countries were approaching or already below the indicators for
the 1970s.
The slow-moving HIV/AIDS infection rate, which reached alarming proportions
in the mid-1990s is the main factor responsible for the sharp decline in the
health status of most African countries over the past decade. The effects of HIV/
AIDS were compounded by widespread poverty in the continent, occasioned by
low or negative growth rates, starting in the 1980s. Surprisingly, measured
growth burden of HIV/AIDS in Africa tends to be modest, even though the
continent has the highest HIV/AIDS incidence in the world.
Based on a review of admittedly limited microeconomic literature on the
relationship between health and income, the paper concludes that accumulation
of health human capital in Africa has been good for growth in the continent and
the vice-versa. There is some evidence that in countries where growth occurred,
it facilitated production and financing of better health, which in turn promoted
growth. The paper further suggests that health human capital, which is
intertwined with education human capital, is a key factor in explaining economic
performance in Africa vis-a-vis other world regions, and in designing policies
for attacking poverty in the continent. | en |