Publication: Impact of Socioeconomic Factors on Life Expectancy: A Global Perspective Across Income Levels
Type:
Article
Date
2026-01-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Abstract
Socioeconomic factors influencing life expectancy are still underexplored across different income groups in global research. This study investigates the socioeconomic determinants of longevity across global income levels, drawing on World Bank data to analyze how various economic and social factors influence lifespan worldwide. A stepwise panel data regression analysis was conducted to examine the determinants. The findings indicate that increase per capita gross domestic product and health expenditure substantially enhance lifespan, whereas increase population size, death rate, and infant mortality rate adversely impact life expectancy globally. In low-income countries, increase per capita gross domestic product, population size, and death rate significantly shorten life expectancy. In lower-middle-income countries, growing population size and death rate progressively lower life expectancy. In upper-middle-income countries, higher per capita gross domestic product significantly boosts longevity, while increase carbon dioxide emissions, population size, death rate, and infant mortality rate substantially reduce life expectancy. In high-income countries, increase male education significantly raises lifespan, while increase population size and death rate reduce life expectancy. These findings can help policymakers, governments, the World Health Organisation, the United Nations, and the World Bank address key issues affecting life expectancy, promoting global health and sustainable economic growth.
Description
Keywords
death rate, health expenditure, infant mortality rate, life expectancy, per capita gross domestic product, population size
Citation
Kaluarachchi, S. and Jayathilaka, R. (2026), Impact of Socioeconomic Factors on Life Expectancy: A Global Perspective Across Income Levels. Sustainable Development. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70702
