The 19th Century Net Nutrition Transition from Free to Bound Labor: A Difference-in-Decompositions Approach

S. Carson
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Abstract

The body mass index (BMI) reflects current net nutrition and health during economic development. This study introduces a difference-in-decompositions approach to show that although 19th century African-American current net nutrition was comparable to working class whites, it was made worse-off with the transition to free-labor. BMI reflects net nutrition over the life-course, and like stature, slave children’s BMIs increased more than whites as they approached entry into the adult slave labor force. Agricultural worker’s net nutrition was better than workers in other occupations but was worse-off under free-labor and industrialization. Within-group BMI variation was greater than across-group variation, and white within-group variation associated with socioeconomic status was greater than African-Americans.
19世纪净营养从自由劳动到束缚劳动的转变:分解方法的差异
身体质量指数(BMI)反映了经济发展过程中当前的净营养和健康状况。这项研究引入了一种分解差异的方法,表明尽管19世纪非洲裔美国人目前的净营养与工人阶级的白人相当,但随着向自由劳动的过渡,情况变得更糟了。身体质量指数反映了整个生命过程中的净营养状况,就像身高一样,奴隶儿童的身体质量指数在接近成年奴隶劳动力时比白人增加得更多。农业工人的净营养状况好于其他职业的工人,但在自由劳动和工业化条件下较差。组内BMI变异大于组间变异,白人与社会经济地位相关的组内变异大于非裔美国人。
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