A. Cheema, Abdullah Cheema, Amna Cheema, Jabbar Ul-Haq, H. Visas
{"title":"Estimating the roles of dependency ratio and economic growth on child mortality in SAARC countries: Evidence from panel data analysis","authors":"A. Cheema, Abdullah Cheema, Amna Cheema, Jabbar Ul-Haq, H. Visas","doi":"10.55214/25768484.v7i1.312","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In developing nations like the SAARC, child mortality is an issue. The health status of an economy can be effectively assessed through its significant indicators. In situations where mortality rates are elevated, there is a corresponding increase in the fertility rate as parents seek to compensate for the higher likelihood of child mortality. This leads to a decrease in the allocation of resources per child in terms of education and healthcare, inadvertently hindering the development of human capital and perpetuating the cycle of poverty and illness. National GDP is lowered by high death rates. This study estimates the roles of dependency ratio and economic growth on child mortality using cross-country data for SAARC countries. The study applies panel data techniques (Fixed Effect Model, Random Effect Model, Generalized Least Square Regression, and Panel Corrected Standard Error regression). Based on the Hausman Specification Test, the preferred model is Random effect model. In the case of heteroscedasticity, the better choice is GLS regression, especially when T is greater than cross-sections N. However, the study also estimates panel-corrected standard error regression. The findings reveal that there is a positive relationship between child mortality and the dependency ratio and a negative one between child mortality and economic growth. The study additionally evaluates the cumulative impacts of both variables on it. The findings indicate that the impact of both variables remains consistent. The policy implications are that economic growth-maximizing and dependency ratio-minimizing policies should be adopted. The study contributes to the existing literature by finding the role of dependency ratio in child mortality, at least with respect to SAARC countries.","PeriodicalId":36430,"journal":{"name":"Edelweiss Applied Science and Technology","volume":"371 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-07-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Edelweiss Applied Science and Technology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.55214/25768484.v7i1.312","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Multidisciplinary","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In developing nations like the SAARC, child mortality is an issue. The health status of an economy can be effectively assessed through its significant indicators. In situations where mortality rates are elevated, there is a corresponding increase in the fertility rate as parents seek to compensate for the higher likelihood of child mortality. This leads to a decrease in the allocation of resources per child in terms of education and healthcare, inadvertently hindering the development of human capital and perpetuating the cycle of poverty and illness. National GDP is lowered by high death rates. This study estimates the roles of dependency ratio and economic growth on child mortality using cross-country data for SAARC countries. The study applies panel data techniques (Fixed Effect Model, Random Effect Model, Generalized Least Square Regression, and Panel Corrected Standard Error regression). Based on the Hausman Specification Test, the preferred model is Random effect model. In the case of heteroscedasticity, the better choice is GLS regression, especially when T is greater than cross-sections N. However, the study also estimates panel-corrected standard error regression. The findings reveal that there is a positive relationship between child mortality and the dependency ratio and a negative one between child mortality and economic growth. The study additionally evaluates the cumulative impacts of both variables on it. The findings indicate that the impact of both variables remains consistent. The policy implications are that economic growth-maximizing and dependency ratio-minimizing policies should be adopted. The study contributes to the existing literature by finding the role of dependency ratio in child mortality, at least with respect to SAARC countries.
在南亚区域合作联盟等发展中国家,儿童死亡率是一个问题。一个经济体的健康状况可以通过其重要指标进行有效评估。在死亡率升高的情况下,生育率也会相应上升,因为父母会设法弥补儿童死亡率上升的可能性。这导致每个儿童在教育和医疗保健方面的资源分配减少,无意中阻碍了人力资本的发展,并使贫穷和疾病的循环永久化。高死亡率降低了国民生产总值。本研究利用南亚区域合作联盟国家的跨国数据,估算了抚养比和经济增长对儿童死亡率的影响。研究采用了面板数据技术(固定效应模型、随机效应模型、广义最小平方回归和面板修正标准误差回归)。根据豪斯曼规范检验,随机效应模型是首选模型。在存在异方差的情况下,更好的选择是 GLS 回归,尤其是当 T 大于横截面 N 时。研究结果表明,儿童死亡率与抚养比之间存在正相关关系,儿童死亡率与经济增长之间存在负相关关系。研究还评估了这两个变量对经济增长的累积影响。研究结果表明,这两个变量的影响保持一致。其政策含义是,应采取经济增长最大化和抚养比最小化的政策。至少就南亚区域合作联盟国家而言,本研究发现了抚养比在儿童死亡率中的作用,从而为现有文献做出了贡献。