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Öğe Analyzing the asymmetric effect of disaggregated health expenditures on economic growth(Springer Science and Business Media B.V., 2023) Erdogan, Sinan; Erdogan, Eyup SerdarEven though health expenditures are one of the significant determinants of accumulation of human capital and economic growth, researchers have paid less attention to unveiling interactions between health care expenditures and economic performance. The main objective of this study is to investigate disaggregated health care expenditures and economic growth nexus in Türkiye from 1979 to 2019 by using an asymmetric causality approach. The main empirical findings could be briefly summed up as follows: there exist asymmetric causal effects running from total health expenditures, out-of-pocket health expenditures and voluntary health expenditures to economic growth, while there is no asymmetric causal effect from compulsory health expenditures to economic growth. The policy inferences of empirical results for enhancing the productivity of health expenditures are stated in the body of the paper. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.Öğe Is the health-led growth hypothesis valid in the Sub-saharan African countries? Fresh evidence from newly developed panel causality tests(Springer Science and Business Media B.V., 2024) Erdogan, Sinan; Erdogan, Eyup SerdarHaving insights into the validity of the health-led growth hypothesis in the Sub-Saharan African Countries is crucial for forming sustainable, inclusive health and economic growth policies and achieving Sustainable Development Goals in the region. However, less attention has been paid to this research topic. Therefore, this paper uses various health expenditure indicators and recently proposed panel causality methods to provide new insights into whether the health-led growth hypothesis can be valid in 43 Sub-Saharan African countries from 2000 to 2019. Empirical findings unveil that (i) there is a bidirectional causality nexus between the current health expenditures-economic growth and governmental health expenditures-economic growth, (ii) there is a unidirectional causal effect running from economic growth to non-governmental health expenditures, (iii) there is a bidirectional causality nexus between the democracy-economic growth and control of corruption economic growth, (iv) there is a unidirectional causal impact running from political stability to economic growth. Moreover, robustness checks have confirmed that the empirical results are robust. A significant part of the empirical findings reveals that the health-led growth hypothesis could be valid in 43 SSA countries, and institutional factors, which determine cultural/political framework and inequalities in accessing health services, have causal impacts on economic growth. © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. 2024.