URBANIZATION,HEALTH AND HUMAN STATURE |
| |
Authors: | Julianne Treme Lee A. Craig |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Economics and Finance, University of North Carolina–Wilmington, North Carolina, USA;2. Department of Economics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Economic growth has not always generated improvements in a population's health. Biological indicators of human well‐being, including stature, suggest the march to prosperity was not a steady one, and these biological indicators offer estimates of the health costs associated with modern economic growth. We employ an international data set to study the socioeconomic benefits and health costs associated with the transition to modern economic growth during the nineteenth century. We find that while the growth of GDP per capita had a positive impact on the stature of Western populations, prior to the mastery of the germ theory of disease, urbanization had a strong negative impact. |
| |
Keywords: | nutrition public health standard of living stature I12 I18 N31 N33 O40 |
|
|