[Impact of Remittance on Healthcare in South Africa]
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would take this opportunity to thank my research supervisor, family and friends for their support and guidance without which this research would not have been possible.
DECLARATION
I, [type your full first names and surname here], declare that the contents of this dissertation/thesis represent my own unaided work, and that the dissertation/thesis has not previously been submitted for academic examination towards any qualification. Furthermore, it represents my own opinions and not necessarily those of the University.
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ABSTRACT
This dissertation investigates the role of private transfers in influencing household consumption and the household's ability to smooth consumption in South Africa. It examines the general relationship between remittances and household health promoting expenditure patterns including health care utilization. It also examines remittances as a household coping strategy to insure income against a health shock. Given the multiple paths through which ill-health is a cause and a consequence of poverty, the ultimate goal of the research is to address the public policy implications of migration and remittances from both poverty and health perspectives. The need for better informed pro-poor health and social protection policies is relevant for a health system characterized by high levels of inequality in access, quality of care, and health care outcomes. The research takes advantage of panel data spanning from 1993 to 2004 from KwaZulu-Natal province to explore these questions in three independent but closely related papers. The first paper reviews the migration literature and proposes a framework for bringing together the remittances, health, and poverty streams in the literature. This paper also investigates the context of migration in South Africa, and the role of public transfers targeted to improve household welfare outcomes for the poorest households. The second paper explores whether remittance-receiving households consume more health promoting goods and have better health seeking behavior. The three main conclusions reported are: (1) remittance receiving households spend a larger budget share on food and health expenditures, (2) remittances enable poorer households to accessThis dissertation investigates the role of private transfers in influencing household consumption and the household's ability to smooth consumption in South Africa. It examines the general relationship between remittances and household health promoting expenditure patterns including health care utilization. It also examines remittances as a household coping strategy to insure income against a health shock. Given the multiple paths through which ill-health is a cause and a consequence of poverty, the ultimate goal of the research is to address the public policy implications of migration and remittances from both poverty and health perspectives. The need for better informed pro-poor health and social protection policies is relevant for a health system characterized by high levels of inequality in access, quality of care, and health care outcomes. The research takes advantage of panel data spanning from 1993 to 2004 from KwaZulu-Natal province to explore these questions in three independent but closely related papers. The first paper reviews the migration literature and proposes a framework for bringing together the remittances, health, and poverty streams in ...