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Heterogeneous Returns to Medical Innovations

Lazuka, Volha LU (2021) In Lund Papers in Economic History
Abstract
This paper sets up a quasi-experiment to estimate both total and heterogeneous impacts of medical innovations on the individual’s economic outcomes for a comprehensive set of around 90 health conditions. The rich administrative panel data for Sweden covering more than 1 million individuals combined with disease-specific data on new molecular entities and patents granted in healthcare have allowed me to emulate such an experiment. I find that an increase in medical innovations by one standard deviation raises disposable family income by 14.8% [95% CI: 14.4%; 15.1%]. Regarding the sources of income response, medical innovations strongly influence not only own disposable and labour income and sickness and unemployment payments but also a... (More)
This paper sets up a quasi-experiment to estimate both total and heterogeneous impacts of medical innovations on the individual’s economic outcomes for a comprehensive set of around 90 health conditions. The rich administrative panel data for Sweden covering more than 1 million individuals combined with disease-specific data on new molecular entities and patents granted in healthcare have allowed me to emulate such an experiment. I find that an increase in medical innovations by one standard deviation raises disposable family income by 14.8% [95% CI: 14.4%; 15.1%]. Regarding the sources of income response, medical innovations strongly influence not only own disposable and labour income and sickness and unemployment payments but also a spouse’s income. The effects of medical innovations are especially strong for cancer and circulatory diseases, are moderate for mental and nervous, infectious and respiratory diseases, and are absent or appear as losses for other health shocks. Results also suggest decreasing returns – yet far from reaching zeros – rather than constant returns to scale. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Working paper/Preprint
publication status
published
subject
keywords
medical innovation, health shock, disposable income, difference-indifference-in-differences approach, Sweden, I12, I14, I24, J22, J24, O31
in
Lund Papers in Economic History
issue
2021:225
pages
26 pages
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a8e5c70c-6b9d-4dbf-bc41-4be1ba4c0b6b
date added to LUP
2021-08-26 12:02:41
date last changed
2022-05-30 16:30:19
@misc{a8e5c70c-6b9d-4dbf-bc41-4be1ba4c0b6b,
  abstract     = {{This paper sets up a quasi-experiment to estimate both total and heterogeneous impacts of medical innovations on the individual’s economic outcomes for a comprehensive set of around 90 health conditions. The rich administrative panel data for Sweden covering more than 1 million individuals combined with disease-specific data on new molecular entities and patents granted in healthcare have allowed me to emulate such an experiment. I find that an increase in medical innovations by one standard deviation raises disposable family income by 14.8% [95% CI: 14.4%; 15.1%]. Regarding the sources of income response, medical innovations strongly influence not only own disposable and labour income and sickness and unemployment payments but also a spouse’s income. The effects of medical innovations are especially strong for cancer and circulatory diseases, are moderate for mental and nervous, infectious and respiratory diseases, and are absent or appear as losses for other health shocks. Results also suggest decreasing returns – yet far from reaching zeros – rather than constant returns to scale.}},
  author       = {{Lazuka, Volha}},
  keywords     = {{medical innovation; health shock; disposable income; difference-indifference-in-differences approach; Sweden; I12; I14; I24; J22; J24; O31}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Working Paper}},
  number       = {{2021:225}},
  series       = {{Lund Papers in Economic History}},
  title        = {{Heterogeneous Returns to Medical Innovations}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/101677872/LUPEH_225.pdf}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}