Methodological development in whole-economy modelling: P. falciparum malaria control in Africa

Lead Research Organisation: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Department Name: Public Health and Policy

Abstract

The demand for economic evidence by policy makers is strong and increasing, used to indicate the relative burden of diseases, the distribution of that burden, and the desirability of specific interventions to affect disease. Such evidence is overwhelmingly generated by studies that measure affects upon individuals, households and the health sector and then scale these up to represent national impacts. However, such analysis is limited in exploring fully the economic impact of a disease with widespread effects, such as malaria, which impacts upon the economy from a number of angles, such as labour supply, tourism and foreign investment. Previous work has demonstrated the value of the Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) approach to modeling these wider effects, but highlighted the need for further development in its application to health issues; specifically, integration of the economic modeling with the epidemiology and demography of disease.

Malaria control in Africa provides the ideal case-study for this methodological developmental work, as it is one of the most common global infectious diseases. Africa especially is heavily affected, and economic analyses of malaria and malaria control policies have been demonstrated to have limitations. Indeed, it has been recently suggested that ?more robust analysis, taking into account factors such as effect on tourism and investment, should be a research priority? (Lancet, 2008; 371: 1634). The developmental work proposed here will take place in Ghana and Mozambique, which reflect the East-West regional differences in malaria epidemiology.

Overall, this project will produce a model of malaria (control) applicable across a range of African counties. Together with existing work, this project will further contribute to a modeling capability applicable across a wide range of infectious diseases, causative agents and developed and developing countries, facilitating the wider application of this form of modeling within health economics, and increasing its relevance to health policy.

Technical Summary

The demand for economic evidence by policy makers is strong and increasing, used to indicate the relative burden of diseases, the distribution of that burden, and the desirability of specific interventions to affect disease. Such evidence is overwhelmingly generated by partial-equilibrium studies, based on analyses of economic effects upon individuals, households and the health sector. Such analysis is limited in exploring fully the economic impact of a disease with system-wide effects, such as malaria. Alternative, whole-economy analyses (considering impacts on national economic indicators and across non-health related sectors) have tended to be undertaken by development economists, typically using a health proxy as an explanatory variable in economic growth models, limiting opportunities to fully analyze the complex relationship between health, other aspects of the economy and broader economic indicators. Previous work has demonstrated the value of the Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) approach to whole-economy modeling, but highlighted the need for further development in its application to health issues; specifically, endogenization of the epidemiology and demography of disease.

P. falciparum malaria control in Africa provides the ideal case-study for this methodological developmental work, as one of the most common global infectious diseases. Africa especially is heavily affected, and economic analyses of malaria and malaria control policies have demonstrated the limitations of both partial-equilibrium and cross-country econometric analyses. Indeed, Feachem and Sabot recently suggested that ?more robust analysis, taking into account factors such as effect on tourism and investment, should be a research priority? (Lancet, 2008; 371: 1634). The developmental work proposed here will take place in Ghana and Mozambique, as these reflect the East-West regional differences in malaria epidemiology.

Overall, this project will produce a dynamic CGE model of malaria (control) applicable across a range of African counties. Together with existing work, this project will further contribute to a modeling capability applicable across a wide range of infectious diseases, causative agents and developed and developing countries, facilitating the wider application of this form of modeling within health economics, and increasing its relevance to health policy.

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