Health maintenance by workers in rural and urban production structures
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Date
2001Author
Mwabu, Germano M
O’Connell, Stephen A
Language
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The paper explores some interactions between production environment
and health maintenance by workers in developing countries. We argue that rural
occupations, being less highly specialized than occupations in urban areas, offer
members of rural households a range of productive activities requiring different
combinations of health capital and other inputs. Urban occupations, in contrast,
typically admit a much smaller range of activities. We use a highly stylized model of
a worker’s allocation of labor time to demonstrate that the non-specialized production
environment of the rural worker raises the opportunity cost of health care at low levels
of health, and thus weakens incentives for curative health maintenance. Health policy
implications of this result in the context of developing countries are drawn.
Citation
Mwabu, G. M., & O'Connell, S. A. (2001). Health maintenance by workers in rural and urban production structures. University of Oxford, Institute of Economics and Statistics, Centre for the Study of African Economies.Publisher
University of Nairobi
Collections
- School of Economics [105]