The health consequences of civil wars: evidence from Afghanistan
- PMID: 36690962
- PMCID: PMC9872361
- DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-14720-6
The health consequences of civil wars: evidence from Afghanistan
Abstract
This study examines the effects of long-run civil wars on healthcare, which is an important component of human capital development and their causality nexus in Afghanistan using the MVAR (modified vector autoregressive) approach and the Granger non-causality model covering data period 2002Q3-2020Q4. The primary results support a significant long-run relationship between variables, while the results of the MVAR model indicate the per capita cost of war, per capita GDP, and age dependency ratio have significantly positive impacts on per capita health expenditures, whereas child mortality rate and crude death rate have negative impacts. The results of the Granger non-causality approach demonstrate that there is a statistically significant bidirectional causality nexus between per capita health expenditure, per capita cost of war, per capita GDP, child mortality rate, crude death rate, and age dependency ratio, while it also supports the existence of strong and significant interconnectivity and multidimensionality between per capita cost of war and per capita health expenditure, with a significantly strong feedback response from the control variables. Important policy implications sourced from the key findings are also discussed.
Keywords: Afghanistan; Causality; Civil wars; GDP; MVAR.
© 2022. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
The authors do not have any competing interests to declare.
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