非洲的快速城市化是否会危及人口的健康和教育?

IF 2 4区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Borice Augustin Ngounou, Honoré Tekam Oumbe, Jean‐Marie Gankou Fowagap, Edmond Noubissi Domguia
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引用次数: 0

摘要

改善和实现更好的健康和教育是可持续发展目标(SDGs)的主要目标之一,有关这一问题的文献极其丰富。因此,在本文中,我们以 49 个非洲国家为样本,研究了城市化对健康和教育的影响。为此,我们使用固定效应方法、Driscoll-Kraay 方法(其稳健性已通过 Lewbel、2SLS 和 1996-2020 年期间的 Kinky 最小二乘法得到证实)、2SLS 和 Kinky 最小二乘法来指定和估计面板数据模型。我们的研究结果表明,城市化对非洲国家的医疗支出和教育产生了积极影响。除了中非、东非、南部非洲、中等收入国家和伊斯兰教及其他宗教外,我们在地区(北非和西非)、发展水平(中低收入国家)和主要宗教(基督教)方面都得到了相同的结果。同样,我们的研究结果表明,虽然城市化会显著恶化非洲国家的医疗支出,但会显著改善教育,这一结果可能会因发展水平和宗教习俗而进一步放大。当我们考虑到公共(国家政府医疗支出)和私人(私人医疗保险和家庭医疗消费支出)医疗支出,以及中等和高等教育入学率时,这一结果保持不变。此外,考虑到其他健康指标,如出生时预期寿命、营养不良率、出生率、肺结核发病率和死亡率,我们的结果表明城市化发挥了重要作用。城市化导致预期寿命延长、营养不良率上升、出生率上升、肺结核发病率和死亡率下降。因此,我们建议非洲各国政府对先进的信息和通信技术进行投资,并鼓励采用这些技术,特别是在边缘化人群中,因为这些新工具有可能大大改善健康状况。这些技术可以更有效地监测和管理流行病和性传播疾病。它们还能促进更好的卫生和教育培训,从而在这两个领域取得更好的成果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is rapid urbanisation in Africa jeopardising the health and education of the population?
Improving and achieving better health and education is one of the main objectives of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and there is an extremely fertile literature on this issue. Therefore, in this paper, we study the impact of urbanisation on health and education in a sample of 49 African countries. To this end, we specify and estimate panel data models using fixed effects methods, the Driscoll–Kraay method, whose robustness has been demonstrated by Lewbel, 2SLS and the Kinky least squares method over the period 1996–2020. Our results suggest that urbanisation has a positive impact on healthcare spending and education in African countries. We obtain the same result by regional zone (North and West Africa), by level of development (Low Middle‐Income Countries) and by dominant religion (Christianity) with the exception of Central Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa, Middle Income Countries and Islamic religion and Others. Similarly, our results reveal that although urbanisation significantly worsens healthcare spending and significantly improves education in African countries, this result may be further amplified by the level of development and religious practices. This result remains the same when we take into account public (national government health expenditure) and private (private health insurance and household consumption expenditure on health) health expenditure, as well as secondary and tertiary education enrolment rates, with the exception of reducing external support for health in government, where urbanisation rather contributes to its reduction. Furthermore, taking into account other health measures, such as life expectancy at birth, prevalence of undernutrition, birth rate, prevalence of tuberculosis and mortality rate, our results indicate that urbanisation plays an important role. This leads to an increase in life expectancy, a higher prevalence of undernutrition, an increase in the birth rate and a decrease in tuberculosis and mortality rates. We therefore suggest that the governments of African countries invest in advanced information and communication technologies and encourage their adoption, particularly among marginalised populations, as these new tools have the potential to considerably improve health outcomes. These technologies make it possible to monitor and manage epidemics and sexually transmitted diseases more effectively. They can also facilitate better training in health and education, leading to better results in both areas.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: The Review of Development Economics is a leading journal publishing high-quality research in development economics. It publishes rigorous analytical papers, theoretical and empirical, which deal with contemporary growth problems of developing countries, including the transition economies. The Review not only serves as a link between theorists and practitioners, but also builds a bridge between development economists and their colleagues in related fields. While the level of the Review of Development Economics is academic, the materials presented are of value to policy makers and researchers, especially those in developing countries.
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