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What are the economic consequences of adult ill- health in Russia? Marc Suhrcke WHO European Office for Investment for Health and.

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Presentation on theme: "What are the economic consequences of adult ill- health in Russia? Marc Suhrcke WHO European Office for Investment for Health and."— Presentation transcript:

1 What are the economic consequences of adult ill- health in Russia? Marc Suhrcke msu@ihd.euro.who.int WHO European Office for Investment for Health and Development (Venice)

2 Sustainable economic growth without health in Russia? Source: World Bank WDI 2005; WHO/EURO HFA database 2005

3 Relevant channels from health to the economy: a simple framework ECONOMY HEALTH Labour productivity Labour supply Education Saving

4 Assessing the economic consequences of adult ill-health A) Past and current impact of adult ill-health on economic outcomes B) Projected macroeconomic benefits of improving adult health

5 Annual days of absence due to illness per employee: Russia vs. EU15 Source: calculations based on RLMS rounds 2000-2003; EU-15 value is from ESWLC 2000

6 Costs of absenteeism due to illness in Russia Source: Suhrcke/Rocco/McKee et al (2005), calculations based on RLMS absenteeism data 2003 Total wage loss (US$ billion) 60.96 Total wage loss as share in GDP 0.71% Total production (GDP) loss (US$ billion) 112.87 Total production loss as share in GDP 1.31%

7 The impact of ill health on labour productivity and supply Self-reported good health increases the wage rates by 22% for women and by 18% for men, compared to those who were not in good health A workday missed due to illness reduces the wage rate by 5.5% for females and 3.7% for males An ‘average’ Russian male aged 55 would be expected to retire at 59. With chronic illness he retires at 57.

8 The impact of chronic illness on early retirement Probability of retiring in subsequent period for average male individual: Source: Panel logit regression as described in Suhrcke/Rocco/McKee et al. 2005 RichestPoorest

9 The death of a household member affects other household members’ welfare: - alcohol consumption up by 10 grams per day Chronic illness affects household incomes: -probability of suffering depression up by more than 50% - annual loss of 5.6% of per capita income (1998-2000) High alcohol consumption significantly increases the probability of job loss.

10 Projecting the impact of 3 future adult mortality scenarios on economic growth

11 Predicted GDP per capita (US$) based (conservative estimate): Source: Suhrcke/Rocco/McKee et al 2005

12 Difference in projected GDP per capita between scenario 1 (‘status quo’) and scenario 3 (‘reach EU15’) Conservative estimate (see graph) Less conservative estimate 2005$ 105$ 324 2025$ 2,856$ 9,243 Source: Suhrcke/Rocco/McKee et al 2005

13 Sustainable economic growth without health in Russia? Source: World Bank WDI 2005; WHO/EURO HFA database 2005


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