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Health care investments and economic performance in Portugal: an industry level analysis

Alfredo M. Pereira (Department of Economics, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA)
Rui M. Pereira (Department of Economics, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA)
Pedro G. Rodrigues (Centre for Public Administration and Public Policies, Institute of Social and Political Sciences, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 14 October 2019

315

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper, on Portugal, is to determine the economic effects of public and private capital spending on health.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use a vector autoregressive model to estimate the elasticities and marginal products of health care investments in Portugal on investment, employment and output.

Findings

Every €1m invested in health care yields significant positive spillover effects, boosting investment and GDP by €24.74 and €20.45m, respectively, creating 188 net jobs. Adversely, net exports deteriorate, as new capital goods are imported. While only 28.2 percent of the total accumulated increase in GDP occurs within a year, investment is front loaded with a corresponding 73.8 percent. Over this period, 68 workers are displaced for every €1m invested. At a disaggregated level, real estate, construction, and transportation and storage are industries where output shares increase the most. Employment shares increase the most in professional services, construction and basic metals.

Research limitations/implications

This paper adds to the empirical literature, corroborating, for example, Rivera and Currais (1999a) and McDonald and Roberts (2002) in that health care spending can have a very significant effect on macroeconomic aggregates. In addition to the analysis of the tradable/non-tradable divide, it adds two further novelties by discussing industry-specific effects on economic performance and the distinction between effects on impact and those over the longer term.

Practical implications

As policy implications, health investments have very significant long-term economic performance effects, but are unhelpful counter cyclically. Also, they will change the industry mix: construction and professional services are the non-traded industries that will benefit the most, while the traded industries of non-metallic minerals, basic metals, and machinery and equipment benefit much less.

Social implications

Given that capital spending on health boosts economic performance, especially in the long run, it ought to be a part of Portugal’s medium-to-long-term growth strategy. Also, if these projects depress economic activity in the short run, and are thus unhelpful counter cyclically, the timing of when they are launched matters. Furthermore, following a health investment, policies that boost net exports will be required to ensure trade balance.

Originality/value

The originality of this paper is to estimate, in a dynamic framework, the aggregate and industry-specific elasticities and marginal products on investment, employment and output, allowing the identification of effects both on impact and over the long term. Although health care investments are expected to have important macroeconomic effects, they need not be evenly distributed across industries.

Keywords

Citation

Pereira, A.M., Pereira, R.M. and Rodrigues, P.G. (2019), "Health care investments and economic performance in Portugal: an industry level analysis", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 46 No. 6, pp. 1174-1200. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-12-2017-0366

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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