Publisher
Springer Nature Singapore
Reference18 articles.
1. Bhadra, K. K. (2016). Inequality effects of fiscal policy: Analysing the benefit incidence on health sector in India. Working Papers. id:8433, eSocialSciences.
2. Castro-Leal, F., Dayton, U., Demery, L., & Mehra, K. (1999). Public social spending in Africa: Do the poor benefit? The World Bank Research Observer, 14(1), 49–72.
3. Chakraborty, L., Singh, Y., & Jacob, J. (2013). Analyzing public expenditure benefit incidence in health care: Evidence from India. (Working Papers Series no. 748). Levy Economics Institute.
4. Davoodi, H. R., Tiongson, E. R., & Asawanuchit, S. S. (2003). How useful are benefit incidence analysis of public education and health spending? (IMF Working Paper no. 03/227). International Monetary Fund.
5. Davoodi, H. R., Tiongson, E. R., & Asawanuchit, S. S. (2010). Benefit Incidence of Public Education and Health Spending Worldwide: Evidence From A New Database. Poverty & Public Policy, 2(2), 5–52.