Relationship between family income and child health in Indonesia

Dede Budiman, Arie Damayanti

Abstract


This study aims to examine the income-health gradient and empirically test the probability of the dependent variable on the child's health status, especially the role of insurance variables, and maternal variables working on children's health status. The use of these 2 (two) variables aims to reduce the social-economic relationship between family income and children's health status. The results of replication from Park's study (2010) showed different income-health gradient results. In this study the results of income-health gradient occurred in school-age children in the 2000-2007 panel data and income-health gradient occurred in the 2007-2014 panel data for preschool and school-aged children, in contrast to Park's (2010) income-health gradient results. only occurs in preschoolers. The role of insurance variables has not been able to reduce the relationship of family income and children's health, while the working mothers variable can reduce the relationship of family income and child health only on the 2000-2007 panel data. Supervision and improvement of insurance facilities by the government as a solution to improve children's health in an effort to break the chain of intergenerational poverty, and increase the program of increasing the proportion of the population with calorie intake below the consumption level of 1400 kcal / capita / day.


Keywords


Income-health gradient, insurance, the working mother.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Adler, Nancy E.; Boyce, Thomas; Chesney, Margaret A.; Cohen, Sheldon; Folkman, Susan; Kahn, Robert L. and Syme, S. Leonard. “Socioeconomic Status and Health, The Challenge of the Gradient.” American Psychologist, January 1994, 49(1), pp. 15–24.

Cameron dan Williams (2009), “Is the Relationship Between Socioeconomic Status and Health Stronger for Older Children in Developing Countries?” Demography, Vol. 46, No. 2 (May, 2009), pp. 303-324.

Case, A. and A. Deaton. 2003. "Consumption, Health, Gender and Poverty." World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series No. 3020. World Bank, Washington, DC.

Case, A., D. Lubotsky, and C. Paxson (2002), “Economic Status and Health in Childhood: The Origins of the Gradient,” American Economic Review, 92(5), 1308-1334.

Condliffe, Simon, and Charles R. Link. 2008. “The Relationship between Economic Status and Child Health: Evidence from the United States.” American Economic Review 98(5):1605–1618.

Currie, J., and M. Stabile (2003), “Socioeconomic Status and Child Health: Why is the Relationship Stronger for Older Children?” American Economic Review, 93(5), 1813-1823.

Fletcher, Jason, and Barbara Wolfe (2012), "Increasing Our Understanding of The Health-Income Gradient In Children." NBER Working Paper No. 18639, JEL No. I1,I12,I14,I3

Grossman, Michael (1972), “On the Concept of Health Capital and the Demand for Health.”Journal of Political Economy 80(2): 223–255.

Grossman, Michael (1970), "The Demand for Health: A Theoretical and Empirical Investigation " Ph.D. dissertation. Columbia Univ.

Kementerian Perencanaan Pembangunan Nasional/ Badan Perencanaan Pembangunan Nasional (BAPPENAS) (2015). Laporan Pencapaian Tujuan Pembangunan Milenium di Indonesia 2014.

Khanama, Rasheda, Hong Son Nghiemb, and Luke B. Connelly. 2009. “Child Health and the Income Gradient: Evidence from Australia.” Journal of Health Economics 28(4): 805– 817.

Mushkin, Selma J. "Health as an Investment." J.P.E. 70, no. 2, supply. (October 1962): 129-57.

Murasko, Jason E. 2008. “An Evaluation of the Age-Profile in the Relationship between Household Income and the Health of Children in the United States.” Journal of Health Economics 27(6): 1489–1502.

O'Donnell, O., F. Rosati, and E. Van Doorslaer. 2002. "Child Labour and Health: Evidence and Research Issues." Understanding Children's Work Working Paper 1. Innocenti Research Centre, Florence.

Park, C. (2010), “Children’s Health Gradient in Developing Countries: Evidence from Indonesia.” Journal of Economic Development 25, Volume 35, Number 4

Strauss, J. and D. Thomas. 1998. "Health, Nutrition and Economic Development." Journal of Economic Literature 36:766-817.

West, P. (1997), “Health Inequalities in the Early Years: Is There Equalisation in Youth?” Social Science & Medicine, 44(6), 833-858.

Wolfe, Barbara, Jessica Jakubowski, Robert Haveman, and Marissa Courey. 2012. ““ The Income and Health Effects of Tribal Casino Gaming on American Indians”. Demography, 49:2 May. 499-524.

World Health Organization (2002), The World Health Report 2002: Reducing Risks, Promoting Healthy Life.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.18860/mec-j.v0i0.5596

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




Copyright (c) 2018 Dede Budiman

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Editorial Office:
Faculty of Economics,
State Islamic University of Maulana Malik Ibrahim Malang
Gajayana Street 50, Malang-East Java, Indonesia 65144
Phone (+62) 341 558881, Facsimile (+62) 341 558881
e-mail: mecjournal@uin-malang.ac.id

 

 

P-ISSN 2599-3402
E-ISSN 2598-9537

Lisensi Creative Commons

MEC-J is licensed under CC-BY-SA
© All rights reserved 2017.

 

MEC-J INDEXED IN:  

                                  

Member of:

 

View My Stats