Han Seung-Yong, Brewis Alexandra A, SturtzSreetharan Cindi
Mayo Clinic/Arizona State University Obesity Solutions, USA.
Mayo Clinic/Arizona State University Obesity Solutions, USA; School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, USA.
Econ Hum Biol. 2018 May;29:115-121. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2018.01.002. Epub 2018 Mar 9.
For an industrialized nation, obesity rates in South Korea are extremely low. Yet, reflecting an extremely fat-averse, thin-positive society, efforts to lose weight are now reportedly very common. Since the 1980s, South Korea has experienced an increasingly flexible and insecure labor market which was exacerbated by the 1997 economic recession. In this social and economic setting, body shape and weight status, as human capital, may have gained significant bargaining power in the labor market. Consequently, we propose that Koreans, particularly those who are employed in "stable" jobs (i.e., non-manual and regular jobs), would increasingly engage in intense weight management and reduction activities even when not technically overweight or obese as a means to job security and upward mobility. Using nationally-representative data from the Korean Nutrition and Health Examination Survey (KNHANES), we identify the changing role of weight concerns versus actual body weight in predicting South Korean efforts to lose weight between 2001 (KNHANES-phase 1) and 2007-2009 (phase 4). The patterns were examined by occupation type (manual and non-manual jobs) and status (regular and non-regular jobs). Oaxaca decomposition analysis supported that people's perception of being "fat," rather than actual weight status, was crucial to explaining accelerated weight management efforts in South Korea over the decade (coef. = 0.062 and p-value < .0001 for male with regular work; coef. = 0.031 and p-value = .002 for female with regular work). Occupation status, rather than employment in itself, mattered. Job stability predicted increased effort; the pattern of change through time suggests efforts to invest high levels of effort in appearance positively impacts both employment opportunity and stability.
对于一个工业化国家来说,韩国的肥胖率极低。然而,据报道,由于韩国社会极度厌恶肥胖、崇尚瘦,减肥的行为现在非常普遍。自20世纪80年代以来,韩国的劳动力市场变得越来越灵活且不稳定,1997年的经济衰退更是加剧了这种情况。在这种社会经济背景下,体型和体重状况作为人力资本,可能在劳动力市场上获得了重要的议价能力。因此,我们认为韩国人,尤其是那些从事“稳定”工作(即非体力和正规工作)的人,即使在技术上不算超重或肥胖,也会越来越多地进行高强度的体重管理和减肥活动,以此作为保障工作安全和向上流动的手段。利用韩国营养与健康检查调查(KNHANES)的全国代表性数据,我们确定了在2001年(KNHANES第一阶段)至2007 - 2009年(第四阶段)期间,体重担忧与实际体重在预测韩国人减肥努力方面所起的变化作用。这些模式按职业类型(体力和非体力工作)和工作状态(正规和非正规工作)进行了研究。奥瓦卡分解分析表明,人们对“胖”的认知,而非实际体重状况,对于解释韩国在这十年间加速的体重管理努力至关重要(正规工作男性的系数 = 0.062,p值 <.0001;正规工作女性的系数 = 0.031,p值 = 0.002)。职业状态,而非就业本身,才是关键。工作稳定性预示着减肥努力的增加;随时间的变化模式表明,在外表上投入大量精力的努力对就业机会和稳定性都有积极影响。