van der Eng Pierre, Sohn Kitae
Research School of Management, ANU College of Business and Economics, The Australian National University, 26 Kingsley Street, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia.
Department of Economics, Konkuk University, 120 Neungdongro, Gwangjin-gu, Seoul 05029, South Korea.
Econ Hum Biol. 2019 Aug;34:216-224. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2018.11.004. Epub 2018 Nov 28.
This article analyses long-term changes in the mean age at menarche (MAM) as a biological indicator of changes in the standard of living in Indonesia. It finds that MAM was about 15.5 for birth cohorts in the late-19th century, decreasing to 14.5 by the 1930s, at which level it stagnated until the gradual decrease resumed since the early 1960s to around 12.5 in the mid-2000s. The article considers that long-term improvements in nutrition, educational attainment and health care explain these trends. An international comparison of long-term changes finds that MAM in Indonesia was much lower than in Korea and China until respectively 1970 and 1990, but comparable to Japan until 1950 and to Malaysia until 1930. The article presents reasons why these differences are unlikely to be related to dissimilarities in climate and ethnicity, and concludes that they are indicative of relative standards of living.
本文分析了初潮平均年龄(MAM)的长期变化,将其作为印度尼西亚生活水平变化的一个生物学指标。研究发现,19世纪末出生队列的初潮平均年龄约为15.5岁,到20世纪30年代降至14.5岁,此后一直停滞在这一水平,直到20世纪60年代初再次开始逐渐下降,到21世纪中叶降至约12.5岁。本文认为,营养、教育程度和医疗保健方面的长期改善可以解释这些趋势。对长期变化的国际比较发现,直到1970年和1990年,印度尼西亚的初潮平均年龄分别远低于韩国和中国,但直到1950年与日本相当,直到1930年与马来西亚相当。本文阐述了这些差异不太可能与气候和种族差异相关的原因,并得出结论,这些差异表明了相对生活水平。