Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy |
Title | Social Protection, Health Risk, and Household Welfare in Zambia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
URL | http://dspace.uib.no/bitstream/handle/1956/16649/dr-thesis-2017-Peter-Hangoma.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |
Abstract | Households in sub-Saharan Africa face substantial health risk. This threatens their welfare and predisposes them to poverty. Despite the high risk environment, they have little or no access to social protection–a set of programs that aims to reduce health risk and provides insurance against its effects, key of which are reductions in labor income and increases in household health expenditure. In childhood, health risk may have additional effects; it lowers cognitive abilities as well as educational attainment and these effects persist in adulthood, working to permanently lower lifetime economic outcomes. Yet still, children from poorer backgrounds face a disproportionately larger share of childhood health risk. In this thesis, I examined the extent to which households are protected from the welfare effects of health shocks (illness and injury) in Zambia. I also evaluated some social protection policies focused at the general population and specific groups such as children and individuals from low socioeconomic background. This was achieved in three sub-studies, each of which forms a separate paper. The first one assessed the effect of health shocks on household consumption, income, and health spending, as well as the extent to which households use borrowing and selling assets as coping strategies in the absence of complete social protection systems, during and after structural adjustment reforms (SAPs). Using data from four waves of the living conditions monitoring survey (LCMS) in the period 1996–2006, it was found that health shocks were associated with reduced consumption both during and after structural reforms. Although health shocks were substantially associated with reduced labor income in both periods, the effect on health spending was much greater after the structural reforms. Middle income households were especially vulnerable. To cope with this risk, household employed informal borrowing and selling assets as self insurance mechanisms. |
» | Zambia - Demographic and Health Survey 2013-2014 |