Fan Wen, Qian Yue
Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota, United States.
Department of Sociology, Ohio State University, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Jan;49:53-69. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2014.07.007. Epub 2014 Aug 2.
This research investigates long-term consequences of early-life malnutrition by examining effects of the 1959-1961 Chinese Famine. Taking into account temporal and geographic variations in famine severity, we construct a difference-in-differences estimator to identify effects of early-life exposure to famine on perceived health and socioeconomic outcomes in midlife. Using a sample of 1716 adults born in 1955-1966 in rural China from a nationally representative survey-the 2005 Chinese General Social Survey-we find that the famine had adverse effects on mid-life health for males born into families where at least one parent was a Communist Party member and females regardless of parental party membership. Being born during the famine had no effects on years of education or income for either gender. Quantile regressions suggest intense mortality selection among males who had no party-affiliated parents. Our study highlights the importance of timing and contexts of life experiences in shaping health.
本研究通过考察1959 - 1961年中国饥荒的影响,来探究早期营养不良的长期后果。考虑到饥荒严重程度的时间和地理差异,我们构建了一个双重差分估计量,以确定早年暴露于饥荒对中年时的健康认知和社会经济结果的影响。利用一项具有全国代表性的调查——2005年中国综合社会调查——中1716名于1955 - 1966年出生在中国农村的成年人样本,我们发现,对于出生在至少有一位父母是共产党员的家庭中的男性以及不论父母党员身份的女性,饥荒对其中年健康有不利影响。在饥荒期间出生对两性的受教育年限或收入均无影响。分位数回归表明,在没有党员身份父母的男性中存在强烈的死亡选择。我们的研究凸显了生活经历的时机和背景在塑造健康方面的重要性。