Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Subsidies for Mental Health Care in India - Coggle Diagram
Subsidies for Mental Health Care in India
Policy Design
Subsidy Mechanisms
Universal vs means-tested
Voucher systems vs direct provision
Employer co-financing models
Behavioral Interventions
Follow-up system
Anti-stigma public campaigns
Default enrollment policies
Supply-Side Policies
Provider training subsidies
Infrastructure development
Dynamic Policy Features
Front-loaded subsidy structure
Conditional cash transfers
Macroeconomic Context
GDP & Aggregate Productivity
Total factor productivity reduction
Innovation capacity constraints
Fiscal Burden
Social welfare and unemployment
Lost tax revenue base
Direct healthcare expenditures
Labor Market Effects
Presenteeism (reduced work quality)
Labour force participation dropout
Absenteeism and productivity loss
Disability claims and early retirement
Theoretical Foundations
Endogenous Growth Theory
Lucas model with human capital
Cognitive spillovers and innovation
Public Economics
Pigouvian subsidising
Externality internalisation
Human Capital Theory
Investment-depreciation dynamics
Grossman health demand model
Mental health as capital stock
Behavioural Economics
Present bias in health investment
Stigma as behavioral barrier
Risks and Trade Offs
Efficiency Concerns
Low quality service provision
Moral hazard in utilisation
Fiscal Sustainability
Crowding out other programs
Long-term debt implications
Budget deficit pressures
Distributional Issues
Urban - Rural accessibility gap
Middle class benefit capture
Implementation Barriers
Cultural Resistance
Administrative Capacity
Market Failures & Justification
Information Asymmetries
Treatment quality uncertainty
Awareness and knowledge gaps
Cultural & Social Barriers
Credit & Insurance Constraints
Positive Externalities
Macro Transmission Channels
Productivity Enhancement
Cognitive function improvement
Boost in Big Five Traits (OCEAN)
Fiscal Multiplier Effects
Induced Consumption Demand
Direct healthcare employment
Labour Supply Effects
Employment participation rates
Career longevity extension
Long-term Growth Impact
Intergenerational transmission
Human Capital Accumulation
Given heterogeneity in treatment response, endogenous uptake constrained by stigma and cultural factors, and fiscal limitations, under what macroeconomic and distributional conditions do subsidies for mental health care generate aggregate improvements in labour supply, productivity, and growth sufficient to justify their implementation as structural economic policy in India?
Analytical & Empirical Framework
Identification Strategy
Diff-in-diff
Instrumental variables
Policy variation
Data Requirement
Labour force surveys
Fiscal Expenditure tracking
Administrative health records
Model Components
Stochastic effectiveness
Endogenous uptake decisions
Heterogeneity