A
Adam Wagstaff
Researcher at World Bank
Publications - 314
Citations - 30650
Adam Wagstaff is an academic researcher from World Bank. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 313 publications receiving 28471 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam Wagstaff include University of Aberdeen & St James's University Hospital.
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How Useful Is Inequality of Opportunity as a Policy Construct
Ravi Kanbur,Adam Wagstaff +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a critique of equality of opportunity in the policy context, arguing that current methods for quantifying and implementing the concept with a view to informing the policy discourse face fundamental questions that remain unanswered.
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Benefit Incidence Analysis: Are Government Health Expenditures More Pro-Rich than We Think?
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the implications of a central assumption of benefit incidence analysis, namely that the unit cost of a government-provided service bears no relation to the out-of-pocket payments paid by the patient.
Nepal - Socio-economic differences in health, nutrition, and population
Shea Rutstein,Adam Wagstaff,Kiersten Johnson,Agbessi Amouzou,Davidson R. Gwatkin,Eldaw Suliman +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a report on the Socioeconomic differences in health, nutrition, and population in Nepal is one in a series of reports that provides basic information about health inequalities within fifty-six developing countries.
Socio-Economic Differences in Health, Nutrition, and Population COLOMBIA
Davidson R. Gwatkin,Shea Rutstein,Kiersten Johnson,Eldaw Suliman,Adam Wagstaff,Agbessi Amouzou +5 more
TL;DR: The figures presented in this paper describe the health, nutrition, and population (hnp) status and service use among individuals belonging to different socio-economic classes in Colombia.
Vietnam : socio-economic differences in health, nutrition, and population
TL;DR: This report is one in a series that provides basic information about health, nutrition, and population (HNP) inequalities within fifty-six developing countries and shows how the report's approach can be applied to monitor the distribution of benefits from other HNP programs, and provides a tool for doing so.