Chulalongkorn University Theses and Dissertations (Chula ETD)
Impact of HIV/AIDS on household consumption reallocation and economic growth in Thailand
Year (A.D.)
1998
Document Type
Thesis
First Advisor
Isra Sarntisart
Second Advisor
Pirom Kamol-Ratanakul
Faculty/College
Graduate School (บัณฑิตวิทยาลัย)
Degree Name
Master of Science
Degree Level
Master's Degree
Degree Discipline
Health Economics
DOI
10.58837/CHULA.THE.1998.1324
Abstract
This study was aimed at examining the impact of AIDS on household consumption reallocation and its effect on economic growth ๒ Thailand. The study was based on secondary data collected from earlier studies and from government publications. Cross-sectional data in 1997 was analyzed. The methodology involved in the study consists of five steps. In the first step, characteristics of people by the 1988 household socio economic survey were selected. In order to know per earner household income, the study constructed earning function models by linear regression. Second, AIDS patients were divided into groups by age (15 to 60 years old), by geographic region, and by one of ten income classes (five each for rural or urban areas, with the first being the poorest and the fifth being the wealthiest). Third, the expected cost of AIDS was calculated across all ten-income classes. Fourth, the annual aggregate consumption expenditure for 1997 was calculated for ten commodities assuming a station without AIDS. Finally, the effect of AIDS on economic growth was calculated based on the consumption reallocation for the ten commodities comparing situation with and without AIDS. The study also attempts to measure the change in national income compared to a situation without AIDS by using parameter estimates from an earlier study. This study uses data on AIDS patients to infer a situation without AIDS, and to thereby estimate the economic cost of AIDS. There are six models based on three geographic regions separated into rural and urban areas which estimate per earner household income. Results indicate that most AIDS patients in urban areas are in the third and fourth income classes. Followed by the fifth income class, and the least number of patients in the first and second income classes. In rural areas most AIDS patients are in the fourth and fifth income classes, followed by the third income class, and the first and second income classes with the least AIDS patients. AIDS results are a reallocation of consumption across the ten commodities, but no net change. Finally, the results show that this station implies a small impact on economic growth.
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Recommended Citation
Mhuengkum, Neramit, "Impact of HIV/AIDS on household consumption reallocation and economic growth in Thailand" (1998). Chulalongkorn University Theses and Dissertations (Chula ETD). 22613.
https://digital.car.chula.ac.th/chulaetd/22613