Department of Health Policy and Management, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 624 N. Broadway, Hampton House 380A, Baltimore, MD 21205, United States of America (USA).
Department of Health Policy and Management, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA.
Bull World Health Organ. 2019 Feb 1;97(2):83-96A. doi: 10.2471/BLT.18.218057. Epub 2018 Nov 6.
To investigate the relationship between joining the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the availability of several commodities with both harmful and protective effects for the development of noncommunicable diseases.
We used a natural experiment design to compare trends in the domestic supply of tobacco, alcohol and seven food groups, between 1980 and 2013, in 21 countries or territories joining WTO after 1995 and 26 non-member countries, using propensity score weights. We applied a comparative interrupted time-series framework, by using multivariate random-effects linear models, adjusted for gross domestic product per capita, the percentages of urban population and female labour force participation. In the tobacco model, we controlled for Member States that had ratified the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and in the alcohol model, the percentage of the population identifying themselves as Muslim.
Following accession to WTO, member states experienced immediate increases in the domestic supply of fruits and vegetables of 55 g per person per day on average, compared to non-member countries. The analysis showed gradual increases in the geometric mean of the supply of tobacco and alcohol of 6.2% and 3.6% per year, respectively. We did not detect any significant changes in the availability of red meats and animal fats; seafood; nuts, seeds and legumes; starches; or edible oils; and results for sugars were inconsistent across model variations.
The results suggest that WTO membership may lead to increases in both harmful and protective factors for noncommunicable disease, but further exploration of country-specific variation is warranted.
探讨加入世界贸易组织(WTO)与多种商品供应之间的关系,这些商品对非传染性疾病的发生既有有益影响,也有不利影响。
我们采用自然实验设计,利用倾向评分加权法,比较了 1995 年后加入 WTO 的 21 个国家或地区和 26 个非成员国 1980 年至 2013 年期间国内烟草、酒精和 7 种食品类别的供应趋势。我们采用多变量随机效应线性模型,并根据人均国内生产总值、城市人口比例和女性劳动力参与率进行了调整,应用了比较中断时间序列框架。在烟草模型中,我们控制了已批准《烟草控制框架公约》的成员国,在酒精模型中,我们控制了自认为是穆斯林的人口比例。
加入 WTO 后,成员国人均国内水果和蔬菜供应量平均每天增加 55 克,而非成员国则没有这种情况。分析表明,烟草和酒精的供应几何平均值每年分别增加 6.2%和 3.6%。我们没有发现红肉和动物脂肪、海鲜、坚果、种子和豆类、淀粉、食用油的供应有任何显著变化;糖类的结果在不同模型变化中不一致。
结果表明,WTO 成员国的加入可能会增加非传染性疾病的有害和保护因素,但需要进一步探索具体国家的差异。