Slade Peter
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada S7N 5A8.
Econ Hum Biol. 2017 Nov;27(Pt A):223-240. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2017.07.001. Epub 2017 Jul 16.
I estimate the effect of body mass index (BMI) on wages across the unconditional distribution of wages. I find that for whites and Hispanics the effect of BMI is generally decreasing across the wage distribution; at the .9 quantile of the wage distribution, a two standard deviation increase in BMI reduces wages by 8% for white males, 13% for white females, 9% for Hispanic males, and 16% for Hispanic females. Conversely, at the .1 quantile, a two standard deviation increase in BMI affects wages by less than 2% for all these groups. For black males, the effect of BMI is positive, and either increasing or non-linear in wages. For black females, the estimates tend to be more uniform across the wage distribution. I discuss possible explanations for these inter-quantile differences including preference discrimination, productivity differences, and statistical discrimination. The results point to a new explanation for the observed correlation between socioeconomic status and body weight: individuals with higher income earning potential have differential incentives to maintain a lower BMI.
我估计了体重指数(BMI)对工资无条件分布的影响。我发现,对于白人和西班牙裔,BMI的影响在工资分布中总体上呈下降趋势;在工资分布的第90百分位数处,BMI增加两个标准差会使白人男性工资降低8%,白人女性降低13%,西班牙裔男性降低9%,西班牙裔女性降低16%。相反,在第10百分位数处,BMI增加两个标准差对所有这些群体工资的影响不到2%。对于黑人男性,BMI的影响是正向的,且在工资方面呈增加或非线性关系。对于黑人女性,估计在工资分布中更为一致。我讨论了这些分位数间差异的可能解释,包括偏好歧视、生产率差异和统计歧视。结果为观察到的社会经济地位与体重之间的相关性指出了一种新的解释:具有较高收入潜力的个体有不同的动机来维持较低的BMI。