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非洲经济体中肥胖库兹涅茨曲线猜想评估:基于性别的区域分析下城市化、食物和贸易的调节效应

Obesity Kuznets Curve conjecture assessment in African economies: conditioning effects of urbanization, food, and trade using gender-based regional analysis.

作者信息

Wang Wenxin, Mensah Isaac Adjei, Atingabili Samuel, Omari-Sasu Akoto Yaw, Nouwati Emmanuel, Kunkuaboor Clement Yenube, Obobisa Emma Serwaa, Qiao Mu

机构信息

School of Public Health/Institute of Local Government Development, Shantou University, Shantou, Shan-Tou 515063, People's Republic of China.

College of Mathematics and Computer Science, Shantou University, Shantou, Shan-Tou 515063, People's Republic of China.

出版信息

Global Health. 2025 May 7;21(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s12992-025-01121-8.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Obesity is recognized as a significant health challenge in Africa, contributing to the double burden of malnutrition and elevating the risks of diabetes, heart disease, and hypertension. Existing studies on the Obesity Kuznets Curve (OKC) assessment overlook Africa's unique socio-economic and gender-specific dynamics. In light of the claim that different socioeconomic characteristics significantly influence the prevalence of obesity in different nations, this study examines the nonlinear relationship between economic growth and each of the obesity prevalence in males, females, and both sexes, respectively, while accounting for the effects of urbanization, trade, and food production.

METHODS

The study employs a panel data design to analyse the OKC hypothesis in a multivariate non-linear framework. The study focusses on Africa, with the study units consisting of African countries analysed within the framework of regional groupings and differentiated by obesity prevalence in males, females and both sexes correspondingly. Specifically, the study utilised panel data of 45 African nations sub-panelled into Eastern, Western, Central and Southern regions during the period from 2000 to 2020. The primary outcome variable is obesity prevalence, while the key exposure variable is economic growth. The study also considers trade openness, urbanization and food production as additional covariates influencing obesity prevalence to provide a nuanced analysis. Considering the existence of residual cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity issue in the panel data, we applied the novel Biased Comment Method of Method estimator using the dynamic fixed-effect model as the main method to ensure robust and reliable estimates. This novel approach allows the study to address unobserved heterogeneity and interdependencies across regional economies.

RESULTS

The principal findings demonstrated a distinct pattern of the OKC (non-linear relationship between the country's economic growth and obesity) when analysing prevalence of obesity in both sexes collectively and also when considering obesity prevalence in males and females separately across the geographical panels used. The results further showed that trade openness is positively associated with obesity prevalence in males and females separately together with both sexes collectively across all regional classifications. However, the effect of urbanization, and food production on obesity prevalence in males, obesity prevalence in females and obesity prevalence in both sexes correspondingly varied across the regional classifications.

CONCLUSION

Our analysis leads to specific policy recommendations, including the development of robust, regionally tailored health policies aimed at preventing obesity across Africa. These include promoting healthy diets through subsidies on nutritious foods, regulating trade polices to limit unhealthy food imports and integrating urban planning to encourage active lifestyles. Considering the rapid economic expansion, urbanization, trade liberalization and food production in many African nation, these strategies ought to address regional and gender-specific dynamics while aligning with global development goals such as SDG 3 (good health and well-being) and SDG2 (zero hunger), to effectively mitigate the rising prevalence of obesity.

摘要

背景

肥胖被认为是非洲面临的一项重大健康挑战,它导致了营养不良的双重负担,并增加了患糖尿病、心脏病和高血压的风险。现有的肥胖库兹涅茨曲线(OKC)评估研究忽视了非洲独特的社会经济和性别差异动态。鉴于不同的社会经济特征会显著影响不同国家的肥胖患病率,本研究分别考察了经济增长与男性、女性以及男女总体肥胖患病率之间的非线性关系,同时考虑了城市化、贸易和粮食生产的影响。

方法

本研究采用面板数据设计,在多变量非线性框架下分析OKC假设。研究聚焦于非洲,研究单位由非洲国家组成,这些国家在区域分组框架内进行分析,并根据男性、女性和男女总体的肥胖患病率进行相应区分。具体而言,该研究利用了2000年至2020年期间45个非洲国家的面板数据,这些国家被细分为东部、西部、中部和南部地区。主要结果变量是肥胖患病率,关键暴露变量是经济增长。该研究还将贸易开放度、城市化和粮食生产视为影响肥胖患病率的额外协变量,以提供细致入微的分析。考虑到面板数据中存在剩余横截面依赖性和异质性问题,我们应用了新颖的有偏评论方法估计器,以动态固定效应模型作为主要方法,以确保估计的稳健性和可靠性。这种新颖的方法使该研究能够解决区域经济间未观察到的异质性和相互依赖性。

结果

主要研究结果表明,在综合分析男女总体肥胖患病率时,以及在按地理区域分别考虑男性和女性肥胖患病率时,OKC呈现出明显的模式(国家经济增长与肥胖之间的非线性关系)。结果还表明,在所有区域分类中,贸易开放度分别与男性、女性以及男女总体的肥胖患病率呈正相关。然而,城市化和粮食生产对男性、女性以及男女总体肥胖患病率的影响在不同区域分类中各不相同。

结论

我们的分析得出了具体的政策建议,包括制定强有力的、因地制宜的健康政策,以预防整个非洲的肥胖问题。这些政策包括通过对营养食品的补贴来促进健康饮食,规范贸易政策以限制不健康食品进口,以及整合城市规划以鼓励积极的生活方式。鉴于许多非洲国家经济快速扩张、城市化、贸易自由化和粮食生产的情况,这些战略应考虑区域和性别差异动态,同时与可持续发展目标3(良好健康与福祉)和可持续发展目标2(零饥饿)等全球发展目标保持一致,以有效缓解肥胖患病率不断上升的趋势。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5818/12060422/8a6a830efc27/12992_2025_1121_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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