工业化与婴儿死亡率

Maya N. Federman, D. Levine
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引用次数: 5

摘要

平均而言,工业化程度较高的国家的婴儿死亡率较低,但在一些国家的早期工业化期间,健康和死亡率恶化。本研究考察了1985年至1995年快速工业化时期,印尼274个地区不断增长的制造业就业对婴儿死亡率的影响。与跨国研究相比,我们有更大的地区样本量,更一致的数据定义,以及更好的因果关系和规范检查。我们还可以探索这些相关性背后的因果机制。总体而言,研究结果表明,制造业就业提高了生活水平和住房质量,减少了用木头和煤做饭的数量,这有助于降低婴儿死亡率。同时,工厂的污染似乎对婴儿很有害。总体影响是,在工业化程度较高的地区,婴儿死亡率略高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Industrialization and Infant Mortality
On average, infant mortality rates are lower in more industrialized nations, yet health and mortality worsened during early industrialization in some nations. This study examines the effects of growing manufacturing employment on infant mortality across 274 Indonesian districts from 1985 to 1995, a time of rapid industrialization. Compared with cross-national studies we have a larger sample size of regions, more consistent data definitions, and better checks for causality and specification. We can also explore the causal mechanisms underlying our correlations. Overall the results suggest manufacturing employment raised living standards, housing quality, and reduced cooking with wood and coal, which helped reduce infant mortality. At the same time, pollution from factories appears quite harmful to infants. The overall effect was slightly higher infant mortality in regions that experienced greater industrialization.
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