Climate Variability, Catastrophic Health Expenditure, and Non-Communicable Disease Outcomes in Nigeria

Authors

  • Jude Igyo Ali, Ph.D. Department of Finance Risk Management and Banking, College of Economics and Management Sciences, University of South Africa, Preller Street, Muckleneuk Ridge, Pretoria, South Africa (0003). image/svg+xml https://orcid.org/0009-0004-7316-9832
  • Prof. Patricia Lindelwa Makoni Department of Finance Risk Management and Banking, College of Economics and Management Sciences, University of South Africa, Preller Street, Muckleneuk Ridge, Pretoria, South Africa (0003). image/svg+xml https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9038-1411

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35898/ghmj-921328

Keywords:

Catastrophic Health Expenditure, Climate Variability, Non-Communicable Diseases, Health Financing, Nigeria

Abstract

Background: The challenges posed by climate change and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are among the most pressing but least explored areas in health economics.

Aims: This study examines the impact of climate shocks, non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) in a single micro-econometric model.

Methods: The study estimates probit, logit, IV-probit, fixed-effects logit, and IV-2SLS models with temperature anomalies instrumented using the values of the ENSO Oceanic Niño Index to overcome the endogeneity problem, using a harmonized panel of 22,110 households in three waves of the Nigeria General Household Survey-Panel (2010/11, 2012/13 and 2015/16).

Results: A 1 °C rise in temperature increases the likelihood of CHE by 4.3-6.1 percentage points and flood vulnerability by 7.1-8.3% points. Across the population affected by non-communicable diseases (NCDs), climate stressors increase the Propensity to experience catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) by approximately 9.4%. Climate variables account for 31.3% of the CHE inequality, with temperature alone explaining 13.6% of the index, and they have a disproportionate impact on poorer households. Instrumental variable projections suggest that an additional 1.9-2.7 million households could experience catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) by 2030 under continued warming trends.

Conclusion: Health financing vulnerability in Nigeria is also a function of uneven climate variability, which requires increased health insurance, an enhanced NCD response, and climate-sensitive social protection policies. These results indicate the need for much-needed policy coordination among health, climate, and fiscal governance systems.

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Author Biographies

  • Jude Igyo Ali, Ph.D., Department of Finance Risk Management and Banking, College of Economics and Management Sciences, University of South Africa, Preller Street, Muckleneuk Ridge, Pretoria, South Africa (0003).

    Jude Igyo Ali, Ph.D., is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of South Africa (UNISA) and an Assistant Professor at Mewar International University, Nigeria. He earned his Ph.D. in Finance from Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka. His research lies in International and Development Finance, with specialized expertise in energy economics, maritime connectivity, climate finance, and trade integration across Africa and other emerging economies. His scholarly work advances debates on financial intermediation, public finance, fiscal governance, and sustainable economic transformation, with publications in reputable peer-reviewed journals contributing to policy and academic discourse.

  • Prof. Patricia Lindelwa Makoni, Department of Finance Risk Management and Banking, College of Economics and Management Sciences, University of South Africa, Preller Street, Muckleneuk Ridge, Pretoria, South Africa (0003).

    Prof Patricia Makoni is a tenured, Full Professor of Finance, working at the University of South Africa (UNISA), having began her lecturing profession in 2004. Her research interests lie in the areas of International and Development Finance. She is also an Associate Member of the Chartered Institute of Development Finance (CIDEF), and a Full Member of the Organisation of Women in Trade (OWIT) Zimbabwe Chapter.

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Published

2026-04-28

How to Cite

Ali, J. I., & Makoni, P. L. (2026). Climate Variability, Catastrophic Health Expenditure, and Non-Communicable Disease Outcomes in Nigeria. GHMJ (Global Health Management Journal), 9(2), 109–121. https://doi.org/10.35898/ghmj-921328

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