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    J Int AIDS Soc. 2009 Sep 16;12:18.

    HIV/AIDS, growth and poverty in KwaZulu-Natal and South Africa: an integrated survey, demographic and economy-wide analysis.

    Source

    School of Accounting, Economics and Finance, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia. gowj@usq.edu.au.

    Abstract

    ABSTRACT:

    BACKGROUND:

    This paper estimates the economic impact of HIV/AIDS on the KwaZulu-Natal province and the rest of South Africa.

    METHODS:

    We extended previous studies by employing: an integrated analytical framework that combined firm surveys of workers' HIV prevalence by sector and occupation; a demographic model that produced both population and workforce projections; and a regionalized economy-wide model linked to a survey-based micro-simulation module. This framework permits a full macro-microeconomic assessment.

    RESULTS:

    Results indicate that HIV/AIDS greatly reduces annual economic growth, mainly by lowering the long-run rate of technical change. However, impacts on income poverty are small, and inequality is reduced by HIV/AIDS. This is because high unemployment among low-income households minimises the economic costs of increased mortality. By contrast, slower economic growth hurts higher income households despite lower HIV prevalence.

    CONCLUSION:

    We conclude that the increase in economic growth that results from addressing HIV/AIDS is sufficient to offset the population pressure placed on income poverty. Moreover, incentives to mitigate HIV/AIDS lie not only with poorer infected households, but also with uninfected higher income households.Our findings reveal the substantial burden that HIV/AIDS places on future economic development in KwaZulu-Natal and South Africa, and confirms the need for policies to curb the economic costs of the pandemic.

    PMID:
    19758444
    [PubMed - in process]
    PMCID: PMC2754430
    Free PMC Article

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