How expansion of public services affects the poor: Benefit incidence analysis for the Lao people's democratic republic

Date

2013

Authors

Warr, Peter
Menon, Jayant
Rasphone, Sitthiroth

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Asian Development Bank

Abstract

Studies of the incidence of benefits from public services have rightly stressed the difference between average and marginal benefits. Cross sectional methods of analysis for Lao PDR indicate that for public education and health services, total benefits are highest for the best-off quintile groups. Nevertheless, these groups' shares of marginal benefits are generally considerably lower and the marginal benefit shares of poorer quintile groups are correspondingly higher. For primary and secondary education and for primary health centers, expanding the overall level of provision delivers a pattern of marginal benefits that is significantly more pro-poor than average shares indicate. Although panel estimates show a pattern of marginal benefits that is somewhat less pro-poor than cross-sectional results suggest, they do not change the finding that the pattern of marginal benefits is more pro-poor than the overall pattern of average benefits.

Description

Keywords

consumption behavior, cost-benefit analysis, public service, democracy, econometrics, health services, low income population, primary education, primary health care, secondary education, welfare economics, Laos Average benefit, Benefit incidence analysis, Education services, Health services, Lao PDR, Marginal benefit

Citation

Source

ADB Economics Working Paper Series

Type

Report (Commissioned)

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO License

DOI

Restricted until

Downloads

File
Description