Medical innovation, life expectancy, and economic growth

Michael Kuhn, Antonio Minniti, Klaus Prettner, Francesco Venturini

Publication: Working/Discussion PaperWU Working Paper

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Abstract

Despite an increasing recognition of the importance of health for economic growth, there is still a lack of understanding of the role of medical innovation in this process. Specifically, what are the causal effects of medical innovation on economic growth and which non-linearities matter in this context? To answer these questions, we propose an R\&D-based economic growth model with overlapping generations in which life expectancy depends on health care utilization per capita and on medical innovation and test the model's implications empirically. We show that a causal pathway from medical innovation to economic growth prevails with life expectancy being an important transmission mechanism. Non-linearities matter in the following way: in early stages of development, medical innovation does not have a positive effect on economic growth, whereas in intermediate stages, a positive and significant effect emerges. In late stages of development, when life expectancy is already very high, the effect becomes weaker and potentially negative because health improvements are increasingly difficult to achieve and become ever more resource intensive.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherWU Vienna University of Economics and Business
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2023

Publication series

SeriesDepartment of Economics Working Paper Series
Number342

WU Working Paper Series

  • Department of Economics Working Paper Series

Keywords

  • Medical innovation
  • industrial innovation
  • life expectancy
  • health
  • economic growth

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