4.7 Article

The Effect of Urbanization on Population Health: Evidence From China

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.706982

Keywords

economic development; urbanization; population health; panel unit root; panel threshold regression model

Funding

  1. Center of Humanitics & Social Sciences [GZL2019008]

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The relationship between urbanization rate and death incidence in inland provinces of China shows a non-linear single threshold effect, with the negative impact of urbanization on death rate decreasing when per capita GDP exceeds a threshold. This effect is significant in the northern provinces and not present in the southern ones.
This paper explores the relationship between urbanization rate and death incidence by applying panel threshold regression model to the inland provinces of China. The empirical results highlight that there is a nonlinear single threshold effect between urbanization and population health indicators. In China's inland provinces, the negative impact of urbanization on death rate is reduced when per capita GDP exceeds the threshold, that is, the positive impact of urbanization on population health is significantly weakened. Similarly, this result can also be applied to the north provinces, while there is a no threshold effect in south. These asymmetric effects are strongly related to geographical location, historical background, economic development conditions, and health policies. Therefore, in the urbanization process, while promoting the steady development of population urbanization, the government should also increase health investment to improve the system and mechanism, formulate policies to raise health awareness, protect residents' health and reduce the waste of health resources.

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