Dina Rosenberg

Associate Professor


Curriculum vitae



Department of Political Science and Economics

Rowan University



Political Economy of Infant Mortality Rate: Role of Democracy Versus Good Governance


Journal article


Dina Rosenberg
International Journal of Health Services, 2018

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Rosenberg, D. (2018). Political Economy of Infant Mortality Rate: Role of Democracy Versus Good Governance. International Journal of Health Services.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Rosenberg, Dina. “Political Economy of Infant Mortality Rate: Role of Democracy Versus Good Governance.” International Journal of Health Services (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Rosenberg, Dina. “Political Economy of Infant Mortality Rate: Role of Democracy Versus Good Governance.” International Journal of Health Services, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{dina2018a,
  title = {Political Economy of Infant Mortality Rate: Role of Democracy Versus Good Governance},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {International Journal of Health Services},
  author = {Rosenberg, Dina}
}

Abstract

Despite numerous studies on whether democracy reduces the infant mortality rate (IMR), the empirical results remain mixed at best. In this article, I perform several theoretical and empirical exercises that help explain why and under what conditions we should expect politics to matter most for a decrease in IMR. First, I capitalize on the epidemiological view that IMR – the most commonly used indicator of health in social sciences – is better suited to reflect public health micromanagement than overall social development. Second, I theorize that autocrats have incentives to invest in health up to a certain point, which could lead to a reduction in IMR. Third, I introduce an omitted variable – good governance – that trumps the importance of a political regime for IMR: (1) it directly affects public health micromanagement, and (2) many autocrats made inroads in achieving good governance. Finally, for the first time in such research, I use a disaggregated IMR approach to corroborate my hypotheses.


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