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<title>HEALTH SHOCKS AND HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING  IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1021</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 20:33:29 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T20:33:29Z</dc:date>
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<title>HEALTH SHOCKS AND HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING  IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1022</link>
<description>HEALTH SHOCKS AND HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING  IN NIGERIA
ONISANWA, IDOWU DANIEL
Households experiencing health shocks (HS-death and disability) are at the risk of incurring &#13;
substantial health expenditure as they seek treatment and experience loss of productive work &#13;
hours, earnings, and declines in consumption. Coping with the economic consequences of HS &#13;
and maintaining consumption in the absence of formal insurance, households respond with their &#13;
own risk reduction, mitigation, and coping strategy (CS). However, not much is known either &#13;
about the impact of HS on the variation of households‟ consumption (HC) or the capacity of &#13;
existing risk sharing arrangements in smoothing consumption against HS in Nigeria. This study &#13;
was therefore, designed to investigate the effect of HS on the HC, identify the strategies adopted &#13;
by households to deal with HS and examine the effect of the most commonly used CS on &#13;
consumption.&#13;
The Full-Insurance theory provided the theoretical framework for the study. Data were obtained &#13;
from two waves of the General Household Survey (GHS) panel, 2011 and 2013, produced by the &#13;
National Bureau of Statistics. The GHS covered 5,000 households across the six geopolitical &#13;
zones. Two measures of HS: death of a household member and disability that incapacitated a &#13;
household member from carrying out normal activities of daily living were used. The HC was &#13;
divided into food and non-food. A fixed effect model was estimated to examine the impact of HS &#13;
on change in HC. Multinomial logit model was used to determine the CS used by households in &#13;
the face of HS. The CSs were categorized into three groups: sales of assets; borrowings; and &#13;
other-strategies. The effects of CS on consumption were computed by regressing the interaction &#13;
term of predicted probability and measure of HS on household consumption. Estimates were &#13;
validated at&#13;
p  0.05 . &#13;
The average household size was 7±4 persons, and the average age of household member was &#13;
27.0±20.0 years. Thirty-one percent of households were both male-headed and married. Twenty nine percent and Sixteen percent of sampled households reported disability and death &#13;
respectively. Disability&#13;
( 4.18) t &#13;
and death&#13;
( 2.09) t &#13;
had a significant negative effect on food &#13;
consumption. Disability decreased food consumption of households by 8.0%, while death &#13;
reduced it by 23.0%. Disability&#13;
( 5.47) t &#13;
as well as death &#13;
( 3.48) t &#13;
of household member had &#13;
significant negative impact on non-food consumption. Sales of assets and borrowing &#13;
iii&#13;
significantly affected the ability of households to maintain consumption with likelihood of 0.67 &#13;
and 0.54, respectively. Sales of assets&#13;
( 6.10) t &#13;
and borrowing &#13;
( 2.9) t &#13;
had positive and &#13;
significant impacts on consumption, while other-strategies&#13;
( 4.55) t &#13;
were negative and &#13;
significant.&#13;
Health shocks reduced household consumption in Nigeria. Sales of assets and borrowing were &#13;
the most prominent coping strategies. Emphasis on measures geared towards providing financial &#13;
protection against health shocks such as payment of disability benefits and assistance to &#13;
households that report death should be intensified by the government.
</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Apr 2018 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1022</guid>
<dc:date>2018-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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