Department of Economics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Econ Hum Biol. 2013 Mar;11(2):148-63. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2012.03.001. Epub 2012 Mar 30.
We examine the nutritional status of a cohort of poor Ethiopian children and their patterns of catch-up growth in height-for-age between three key development stages: age one, five and eight. We use ordinary least squares (within community) and instrumental variables analysis. During the earliest period, we find that nutritional catch-up patterns vary substantially across socioeconomic groups: average catch-up growth in height-for-age is almost perfect among children in relatively better-off households, while among the poorer children, relative height is more persistent. Between five and eight years of age, however, we find near-perfect persistence and no evidence of heterogeneity in catch-up growth. Our findings suggest that household wealth, and in particular access to services, can lead to substantial catch-up growth early on in life. However, for our sample, the window of opportunity to catch up appears to close as early as the age of five.
我们考察了一群埃塞俄比亚贫困儿童的营养状况,并研究了他们在三个关键发育阶段(一岁、五岁和八岁)的身高追赶生长模式。我们采用了普通最小二乘法(社区内)和工具变量分析。在最早的阶段,我们发现营养追赶生长模式在社会经济群体之间存在显著差异:相对富裕家庭的儿童身高追赶生长几乎完美,而较贫困家庭的儿童相对身高则更持久。然而,在五岁到八岁之间,我们发现几乎完美的持续性,并且没有追赶生长的异质性证据。我们的研究结果表明,家庭财富,特别是获得服务的机会,可以在生命早期导致显著的追赶生长。然而,对于我们的样本来说,追赶的机会窗口似乎早在五岁就关闭了。