Publication:
Aggregate Income Shocks and Infant Mortality in the Developing World

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Journal Article (104.71 KB)
10,415 downloads
Published
2011-08
ISSN
00346535
Date
2012-03-30
Author(s)
Baird, Sarah
Schady, Norbert
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Abstract
Health and income are strongly correlated both within and across countries, yet the extent to which improvements in income have a causal effect on health status remains controversial. We investigate whether short-term fluctuations in aggregate income affect infant mortality using an unusually large data set of 1.7 million births in 59 developing countries. We show a large, negative association between per capita GDP and infant mortality. Female infant mortality is more sensitive than male infant mortality to negative economic shocks, suggesting that policies that protect the health status of female infants may be especially important during economic downturns.
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