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Disease and Development Revisited

  • December 2014
  • Journal Article
Bloom, David, Canning, David & Fink, Gunther

Publisher/Institution: Journal of Political Economy

Pages: 1355-1366

Abstract: In a recent paper, Acemoglu and Johnson (2007) argue that the large increases in population health witnessed in the 20th century may have lowered income levels. We argue that this result depends crucially on their assumption that initial health and income do not affect subsequent economic growth. Using their data we reject this assumption in favor of a model of conditional convergence, with income adjusting to its steady state over time. We show that, allowing for conditional convergence, exogenous improvements in health due to technical advances associated with the epidemiological transition appear to have increased income levels.

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Disease and Development Revisited

  • December 2014
  • Journal Article
Bloom, David, Canning, David & Fink, Gunther

Publisher/Institution: Journal of Political Economy

Pages: 1355-1366

Abstract: In a recent paper, Acemoglu and Johnson (2007) argue that the large increases in population health witnessed in the 20th century may have lowered income levels. We argue that this result depends crucially on their assumption that initial health and income do not affect subsequent economic growth. Using their data we reject this assumption in favor of a model of conditional convergence, with income adjusting to its steady state over time. We show that, allowing for conditional convergence, exogenous improvements in health due to technical advances associated with the epidemiological transition appear to have increased income levels.

Resources

PopPov on Twitter