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Household expenditure and child health in Vietnam: analysis of longitudinal data

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 16:34 authored by Trong Anh Trinh, Pratima SrivastavaPratima Srivastava, Sarah Brown
While the relationship between socioeconomic status and child health has been studied extensively in developed countries, evidence is limited for developing countries. This study makes an important contribution by examining the relationship between child health and household socioeconomic status in Vietnam, using household expenditure as an alternative measure. This also allows us to explore the mechanisms via which income affects child health, in which household consumption arguably plays a crucial role. We employ different measures of health that allow us to examine both long-run and short-run effects, and two alternative instrumental variables, the unemployment rate and rainfall deviation, to address the potential endogeneity of household expenditure. We find evidence of a strong positive impact of household expenditure on child health and the findings are consistent across age groups. Specifically, a 10% increase in expenditure will result in a weight gain of 213–541 g in a “typical” child. We also explore the effect of a range of exogenous adverse economic shocks on children's health.

History

Journal

Journal of Demographic Economics

Volume

88

Issue

3

Start page

4

End page

26

Total pages

23

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Université catholique de Louvain 2021

Former Identifier

2006105672

Esploro creation date

2022-08-11

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