Title: World Bank
1World Banks Thematic Group on Health, Nutrition
and Population and PovertyREACHING THE POOR
CONFERENCE, February, 2004 ASSESSING
CHANGES IN TARGETING IN HEALTH AND NUTRITION
POLICIESTHE CASE OF ARGENTINA (Part
A)Leonardo Gasparini Mónica Panadeiros Funda
ción de Investigaciones Económicas
LatinoamericanasBuenos Aires, Argentina
2I. Introduction
REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Argentina suffered a deep recession from 1998 to
2002 GDP fell 18.4 between those years.
Real GDP, 1990100
Source authors calculations based on Ministerio
de Economía.
3REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- In concordance, inequality and poverty have
substantially increased. The poverty headcount
ratio was 20.1 in 1998 four years later that
rate had increased to 54.3.
Gini coefficient Household per capita
income Greater Buenos Aires, 1990-2002
Poverty headcount ratio Greater Buenos Aires,
1990-2002
Source CEDLAS (2003)
4REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- In this scenario, it is very relevant to target
the (scarce) public resources to the needy. - This study contributes to the understanding of
the distributional incidence of social policies
in Argentina. In particular, we focus the
analysis on health and nutrition policies
directed to pregnant women and children under 4.
This presentation deals with maternal and child
health services.
5REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- II. Maternal and child health programs
- The health system is organized around a strong
participation of the public sector besides
regulating health services, it owns and operates
an extensive network of public hospitals and
primary health care centers.
Health care beds (1995)
6REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- The public health system is universal no
requirements are needed to use most of the
services in public health facilities. - In these health facilities, people have access to
all sorts of services free of charge, but to
outpatient drugs. - The access to the system is also free in
enrollment any citizen is allowed to attend the
primary health center and/or hospital freely
chosen each time.
7REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- In this study, we concentrate the analysis on the
following health services to pregnant women and
children under 4 - Antenatal care
- Attended delivery
- Visits to a physician
- Medicines
- Hospitalizations
8REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- III. Methodology
- One of the main questions the study is intended
to contribute to the answer is Who are the
beneficiaries of public health programs directed
to pregnant women and children? - To tackle this question, we perform a traditional
benefit-incidence analysis of public spending on
these programs. - A benefit-incidence analysis allows an assessment
of the degree of targeting of average public
spending.
9REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- An usual assumption is that users of the
subsidized service and their families are the
beneficiaries of the public program. - Benefits from a specific program are assigned to
individuals according to their answers to a
household survey on the use of that program. - Information from two Living Standard Surveys
with questions on the use of various health
services (1997 and 2001) is used in this study.
10REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- A crucial stage in a benefit-incidence analysis
is sorting households by a welfare indicator. - We mostly use household income adjusted for
demographics, or equivalized household income, as
the individual welfare indicator. - Total population and children are grouped in
quintiles of the distribution of equivalized
households income. By construction, quintiles
have 20 of total population. Instead, since the
number of children per household is decreasing in
income, the share of children is not uniform
along income distribution.
11REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Population and children by quintilesDistribution
of equivalized household income
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV.
12REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- To find the beneficiaries of each public program,
we proceed in three stages by identifying (i) the
potential users of the service (for example
mothers with children under 2 in the case of
antenatal care), (ii) the effective use of the
service, and (iii) the public/private choice. - The fact that the number of children per
household (potential users) is decreasing in
income, will have a fundamental consequence on
the distributional incidence of public programs
directed to children. Even a universal program to
all children will be pro-poor, given the negative
correlation between the number of children and
household income. This relationship became less
strong between 1997 and 2001, implying a
potential reduction in the targeting of social
policies.
13REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- IV. Findings
- Antenatal care
- Antenatal care is widespread in Argentina, even
for poor mothers. Subsidies are highly pro-poor.
This pro-poor pattern is basically the
consequence of a greater concentration of
children under 2 in the bottom tail of the
distribution, and a choice of public facilities
significantly decreasing in income. - The degree of targeting decreased between 1997
and 2001. This change seems to be mostly the
consequence of a reduction in the share of
children under 2 in the bottom quintile, and the
increase in the use of public facilities in mid
and high-income households.
14REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Antenatal care By quintiles of the equivalent
household income distribution
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV.
15REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Attended delivery
- Most deliveries in urban Argentina are assisted
by a medically trained person. - Deliveries in public hospitals are much more
often for poor than for rich mothers. - Given that fertility is higher in poor households
and the use of public hospitals is more
widespread, the subsidy to attended deliveries in
public hospitals is clearly pro-poor. - This service seems to have become less targeted
over time.
16REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Attended delivery By quintiles of the equivalent
household income distribution
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV.
17REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Visits to a doctor
- There are differences in the 1997 and 2001
questionnaires. The 1997 survey reports
consultations with a physician only for those
children reported sick. The 2001 survey instead
asks directly for consultations with a physician.
Because of that, there are large differences in
the share of children seen by a doctor in 1997
and 2001. If in 2001 we restrict the analysis to
those reported sick, the shares are similar. - The share of children under 4 who visited a
doctor in the month previous to the survey is
more sensitive to household income in the 2001
survey than in the 1997 survey. - This is a sign that taking a child to the doctor
when not considering her sick is a more frequent
behavior in wealthier households than in poorer
ones.
18REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Results for both 1997 and 2001 clearly indicate a
pro-poor profile of public subsidies. Around 70
of the beneficiaries of these subsidies are
individuals in the two poorest quintiles of the
population. - The main reasons of this pro-poor pattern is the
greater concentration of children under 4 in the
bottom tail of the distribution, and a choice of
public facilities decreasing in income. - The degree of targeting decreased between 1997
and 2001.
19REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Visits to doctor By quintiles of the equivalent
household income distribution
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV. Note (1) calculated as the product of
the two previous rows, (2) actual answers. (3)
Incidence is estimated as in (1).
20REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Hospitalizations
- Subsidies to this service are highly pro-poor,
but the degree of targeting has decreased over
time. - During 1997-2001 there has been a slow increase
in the use of public facilities. That increase
was rather widespread along the income
distribution.
21REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Hospitalizations By quintiles of the equivalent
household income distribution
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV.
22REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Medicines
- Only some medicines are given for free or at
subsidized prices at public health facilities. - The results unambiguously suggests a pro-poor
profile of public subsidies to medicines for
children in public facilities. Around 50 of
these drugs go to children from households in the
bottom quintile of the income distribution. - Again, there is a clear reduction in the degree
of targeting of this public program between 1997
and 2001.
23REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
Medicines By quintiles of the equivalent
household income distribution
Source authors calculations based on the EDS
and ECV.
24REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE (February 18-20,
2004) Gasparini-Panadeiros, Part A
- Summarizing incidence results
- All health programs considered are pro-poor.
Incidence results do not significantly differ
among these programs. - The pro-poor pattern is basically the consequence
of i) a greater number of children per household
of low-income families relative to the rest ii)
a choice of public facilities significantly
decreasing in income. - The degree of targeting seems to have decreased
for all health services considered since 1997. - Demographic changes (fall in the relative
fertility rates of poor people) would explain a
sizeable part of the decrease in the degree of
targeting. - The other explanatory factor would be an increase
in the use of public facilities by better-off
households, likely triggered by the economic
crises that Argentina has suffered since 1998.