London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Health and Social Care, London, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Aug;75(4):754-60. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.04.017. Epub 2012 May 11.
Income inequality is strongly associated with infant mortality across countries, but whether this association is causal has not been established. In their commentary in this issue of Social Science & Medicine, Regidor et al. (2012) argue that this association has disappeared in recent years, and question the premise of a causal link. This paper empirically tests the impact of income inequality on infant mortality in a fixed effects model that exploits the evolution of income inequality over a 38-year period, controlling for all time-invariant differences across countries. Data came from the Standardized World Income Inequality Database, containing yearly estimates for the period 1960-2008 in 34 countries member of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), linked to infant mortality data from the OECD Health database. Infant mortality was modelled as a function of income inequality in a country and year fixed effects model, incorporating controls for changing economic and labour conditions. In a model without country fixed effects, a one-point increase in the Gini coefficient was associated with a 7% increase in the infant mortality rate (Rate ratio[RR] = 1.07, 95% Confidence Interval [CI] 1.04, 1.09). Controlling for differences across countries in a country fixed effects model, however, income inequality was no longer associated with infant mortality (RR = 1.00, 0.98, 1.01). Similar results were obtained when using lagged values of income inequality for up to 15 years, and in models that controlled for changing labour and economic conditions. Findings suggest that in the short-run, changes in income inequality are not associated with changes in infant mortality. A possible interpretation of the discrepancy between cross-country correlations and fixed effects models is that social policies that reduce infant mortality cluster in countries with low income inequality, but their effects do not operate via income. Findings highlight the need to examine the impact of more specific social policies on infant mortality.
收入不平等与各国的婴儿死亡率密切相关,但这种关联是否具有因果关系尚未确定。在本期《社会科学与医学》杂志的评论中,雷吉多等人(2012 年)认为,这种关联近年来已经消失,并对因果关系的前提提出质疑。本文通过固定效应模型实证检验了收入不平等对婴儿死亡率的影响,该模型利用 38 年来收入不平等的演变,控制了各国之间所有不变的差异。数据来自标准化世界收入不平等数据库,其中包含了 1960 年至 2008 年 34 个经济合作与发展组织(OECD)成员国的年度估计数,并与 OECD 健康数据库中的婴儿死亡率数据相关联。婴儿死亡率作为国家和年份固定效应模型中收入不平等的函数进行建模,纳入了对经济和劳动力条件变化的控制。在没有国家固定效应的模型中,基尼系数增加一个点与婴儿死亡率增加 7%相关(比率比[RR] = 1.07,95%置信区间[CI] 1.04,1.09)。然而,在国家固定效应模型中控制各国之间的差异后,收入不平等与婴儿死亡率不再相关(RR = 1.00,0.98,1.01)。当使用收入不平等的滞后值长达 15 年时,以及在控制劳动力和经济条件变化的模型中,也得到了类似的结果。研究结果表明,在短期内,收入不平等的变化与婴儿死亡率的变化无关。对跨国相关性和固定效应模型之间差异的一种可能解释是,降低婴儿死亡率的社会政策在收入不平等较低的国家中集中实施,但这些政策的效果并非通过收入来实现。研究结果强调了需要研究更具体的社会政策对婴儿死亡率的影响。