Individual technologies for health - the implications of distinguishing between the ability to produce health investments and the capacity to benefit from those investments
Abstract
People differ in their ability to produce health investments and in their capacity to benefit
from such efforts. In this paper, we assume (1) that the individual’s health-investment production function exhibits diminishing returns to scale and (2) that the individual’s capacity to benefit from the investments is diminishing in the stock of health. Previous research has only shown the importance of the first assumption for the health-capital adjustment process. The simultaneous effects go well beyond those results, however. Thus, this paper provides an extended demand-for-health framework that distinguishes between individuals both by their capacities to benefit and by their abilities to produce, when transforming health efforts into health increments. The potential usefulness of this framework for health-policy purposes is demonstrated by solving a numerically specified
version of the model, and computing individual welfare effects of medical-care goods changes.
Other description
JEL: I10, I12, J24
Collections
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Date
2014-03Author
Bolin, Kristian
Liljas, Bengt
Lindgren, Björn
Keywords
investments in health
diminishing returns
capacity to benefit
human capital
Grossman model
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
587
Language
eng