Determination of Minimum Wage for Garments Worker in Bangladesh Ensuring Firms Profitability
Full Text | |
Author | Miniar Ben Ammar Sghari, Sami Hammami |
ISSN | 2225-7217 |
On Pages | 256-260 |
Volume No. | 2 |
Issue No. | 3 |
Issue Date | June 01, 2020 |
Publishing Date | June 01, 2020 |
Keywords | health expenditure, health care demand, supply of care, technical progress |
Abstract
Health expenditure is growing at a faster rate than GDP. Newhouse (1977) [1], emphasizes in his that theory on health would be made as a typical example of a higher good. In a context of failure of the measures taken so far to curb the growth of health spending, it is crucial to identify the factors explaining the increase of the latter. In this paper, we denote by health spending, the overall spending on medical, whatever their nature (ie, mainly spending on hospital, outpatient, pharmacy and medical goods expenditures) or the mode of financing (socialized expenses, reimbursed by private insurance or direct payments to households).
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