Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data: Concentration Index
Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data: Concentration Index
Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data: Concentration Index
Lecture 8
Concentration Index
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Can you compare the degree of inequality
in child mortality across these countries?
100%
Equality
80% Brazil
Cote d'Ivoire
Ghana
under-5 deaths
60% Nepal
cumul %
Nicaragua
Pakistan
Cebu
40%
S Africa
Vietnam
75%
CI = 2 x area
50% between 450 line and
concentration curve
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Concentration indices for U5MR
0.1
C and 95% conf interval
0.0
-0.1
-0.2
-0.3
-0.4
-0.5
SE) 1987-92
1982-93
(Cebu) 1981-
Ghana 1978-
Nicaragua
South Africa
Cote d’Ivoire
1981-90
Nepal 1985-
Vietnam
Pakistan
Phillipines
1978-89
96
89
91
“Analyzing
. Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Concentration index defined
100% C = 2 x area
between 450 line and concentration
cum. % of health variable
curve
= A/(A+B)
75%
C>0 (<0) if health variable is
disproportionately concentrated on
50% rich (poor)
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Some formulae for the concentration
index
1
C 1 2 Lh p dp
0
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Erreygers (2006) modified
concentration index
Where bh and ah are the max and min
E h 4 C h of the health variable (h)
bh ah
• This satisfies the following axioms:
– Level independence: E(h*)=E(h), h*=k+h
– Cardinal consistency: E(h*)=E(h), h*=k+gH,
k>0, g>0
– Mirror: E(h)=-E(s), s=bh-h
– Monotonicity
– Transfer
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Interpreting the concentration index
• How “bad” is a C of 0.10?
• Does a doubling of C imply a doubling of
inequality?
• Koolman & van Doorslaer (2004) –
– 75C = % of health variable that must be
(linearly) transferred from richer to poorer half
of pop. to arrive at distribution with a C of zero
– But this ensures equality of health predicted by
income rank and not equality per se
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Inequality is not simply correlation
• Milanovic (1997) decomposition for Gini
can be adapted for concentration index:
12 r h
2
C h, r
3
• C is (scaled) product of coefficient of
variation and correlation h, r
h
0% 0%
Poorest 29939 23% 23% 154.7 4632 30% 30% -0.0008
2nd 28776 22% 45% 152.9 4400 29% 59% -0.0267
Middle 26528 20% 66% 119.5 3170 21% 79% -0.0592
4th 24689 19% 85% 86.9 2145 14% 93% -0.0827
Richest 19739 15% 100% 54.3 1072 7% 100% 0.0000
Total/average 129671 118.8 15419 -0.1694
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Estimating the concentration index
from micro data
• Use “convenient covariance” formula C=2cov(h,r)/μ
– Weights applied in computation of mean, covar and rank
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Standard error of the estimate of the
concentration index
• Kakwani et al (1997) provide a formula for delta-
method SE
– But formula does not take account of weights or sample
design
• Could use the SE from the convenient regression
– Allows adjustment for weights, clustering, serial
correlation, etc
– But that does not take account of the sampling variability
of the estimate of the mean
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Delta method standard error from
convenient regression
To take account of the sampling variability of the
estimate of the mean, run this regression hi 1 1ri ui
Or using the properties of OLS
2 2
ˆ r
ˆ1
ˆ ˆ1
This estimate is a non-linear
function of the regression 1
2
coeffs and so its standard error can be obtained by the
delta method.
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Demographic standardization of the
concentration index
• Can use either method of standardization
presented in lecture 5 & compute the C index
for the standardized distribution
• If want to standardized for the total correlation
with demographic confounding variables (x),
then can do in one-step
• OLS estimate of β2 is indirectly standardized
concentration index 2 2 hi r x
r 2 2 i j ji i
j
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and
Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington DC, 2008, www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity
Sensitivity of the concentration
index to the living standards measure
• C reflects covariance between health and rank in
the living standards distribution
• C will differ across living standards measures if
re-ranking of individuals is correlated with health
(Wagstaff & Watanabe, 2003)
hi
From OLS estimate of 2 ri i 2
r
where ri r1i r2i is the re-ranking and 2r its variance,