Abstract
There is abundant evidence of a relationship between socio-economic variables, such
as income, wealth or labour position, and a variety of health outcomes, in terms of
mortality and morbidity. Recently, some scientists have tried to prove that is not
income itself, but inequality in income, that causes negative effects on health. This
kind of approach is named relative income hypothesis, in contrast to the absolute
income hypothesis. Another approach, held mostly by academic economists, denies
the existence of a causal link between income and health, and supports the opposite
causality relationship, which considers the initial stock of health as the determining
factor of individual income and wealth. The first part of the paper provides an
overview of the existing literature on the connection between socio-economic variables
and health in industrialized countries. The second part is devoted to comment on
the existing debate between the absolute income and relative income assumptions, and
on the analysis of the different health policy measures that each approach implies
Titolo tradotto del contributo | [Machine translation] Socioeconomic variables and health: alternative interpretations and health policy measures |
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Lingua originale | Italian |
pagine (da-a) | 29-48 |
Numero di pagine | 20 |
Rivista | ECONOMIA PUBBLICA |
Volume | 6/2004 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2004 |
Keywords
- Variabili socioeconomiche
- distribuzione del reddito
- ineguaglianze negli indici di salute
- reddito relativo vs reddito assoluto