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A Public Choice Approach to the Economic Analysis of Animal Healthcare Systems

Published by:
Publication date
22/03/2004
Language:
English
Type of Publication:
Studies
Focus Region:
North America
Focus Topic:
Health & Diseases
Type of Risk:
Biological & environmental
Commodity:
Livestock
Source
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/r4d/PDF/Outputs/Livestock/PPLPIwp11.pdf http://www.dfid.gov.uk/r4d/PDF/Outputs/Livestock/PPLPIexecsumm_wp11.pdf
Author
Riviere-Cinnamond, A.

Privatisation of animal healthcare systems in developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, has had very limited success. Introduced with inadequate transition time and too few resources, many livestock owners either cannot afford or, just as likely, are unable to gain access to the services they need. Poor livestock owners in remote rural areas suffer the greatest disadvantage. This fact is undisputed but, since privatisation, the primary focus has been on analysing the performance of animal healthcare systems and few authors have studied the underlying economic theories that have driven privatisation policy nor examined in what ways these may have been detrimental.

This working paper examines how the economic analysis of animal health services has evolved since the ’90s. A comparison is made with economic theories underlying the provision of human healthcare services where the debate started much earlier (in the ’60s). Special emphasis is put on how these perspectives have influenced privatisation policy and, in particular, based in general economic literature, how the way in which ‘public goods’ is defined affects their financing and provision. Following this perspective, the role that governments should expect to play in the animal healthcare sector post privatisation is also debated.

A two page executive summary is also available in addition to this paper.