1 |
Akinkugbe, O. and Afeikhena, J. (2006), Public health care spending as a determinant of health status: a panel data analysis for SSA and MENA, Applied macroeconomics and economic development, Ibadan University Press.
|
2 |
Anyanwu, C. J. and Erhijakpor, E. O. A. (2007), Health expenditures and health outcomes in Africa, African Development Bank Economic Research, Working Paper No 91.
|
3 |
Burnside, C. and Dollar, D. (1998), Aid, the incentive regime and poverty reduction, The World Bank, Washington DC.
|
4 |
Granger, C. W. J. (1969), Investigating causal relations by econometric models and cross-spectral methods, Econometrica, 37, 424-438.
DOI
|
5 |
Hartwig, J. (2010), Is health capital formation good for long-term economic growth?-Panel Granger-causality evidence for OECD countries, Journal of macroeconomics, 32(1), 314-325.
DOI
ScienceOn
|
6 |
Holtz-Eakin, D., Newey, W., and Rosen, H. (1988), Estimating vector autoregressions with panel data, Econometrica, 56, 1371-1395.
DOI
|
7 |
Levin, A., Lin, C. F., and Chu, C. S. J. (2002), Unit root tests in panel data: Asymptotic and finite-sample properties, Journal of Econometrics, 108, 1-24.
DOI
|
8 |
Motonishi, T. and Yoshikawa, H. (1999), Causes of the long stagnation of Japan during the1990s: financial or real, Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, 13, 181-200.
DOI
|
9 |
Musgrove, P. (1996), Public and private roles in health, Technical report 339, The World Bank, Washington DC.
|
10 |
Tuohy, C. H., Flood, C. M., and Stabile, M. (2004), How does private finance affect public health care systems? Marshaling the evidence from OECD nations, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 29(3), 359-396.
DOI
|