Hussien, Abdurohman and Ayele, Gashaw (2016): Inequality of Opportunity in child Health in Ethiopia.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_86592.pdf Download (1MB) | Preview |
Abstract
While child health is influenced by parental inputs and access to public services, among other factors, the latter are not equitably distributed across children, leading to inequality of opportunity (IOp). Using standardized height-for-age and weight-for-height as health outcome measures, the study decomposes the total inequality in child health in to a part attributable to child circumstances such as parental background, and access to public services—hence IOp in child health, and a part due to random variation in health. Using the young lives survey data in 2002 and 2006, the study then demonstrates that IOp in child health has increased over this period, regardless of the method of inequality decomposition used. Further scrutiny reveals that while access to infrastructure accounts for the highest share of IOp in 2002, mother’s religion, household wealth, access to clean water and sanitation are more responsible for the increase in IOp in 2006.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Inequality of Opportunity in child Health in Ethiopia |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | inequality of opportunity, child health, nutrition, height-for-age, weight-for-height |
Subjects: | I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I14 - Health and Inequality |
Item ID: | 86592 |
Depositing User: | Mr. Abdurohman Hussien |
Date Deposited: | 08 May 2018 13:47 |
Last Modified: | 02 Oct 2019 09:29 |
References: | • Assad, R., C. Kraft, N.B. Hassine, and D. Salehi-Esfahani. (2012). Inequality of Opportunity in Child Health in the Arab World and Turkey. Economic Research Forum, Working Paper No. 665. • Black, R., L. Allen, Z. Bhutta, L. Caulfield, M. de Onis, M. Ezzati, C. Mathers, and J. Rivera. (2008). Maternal and child undernutrition: global and regional exposures and health consequences. The Lancet 371(9608): 243-60. • Checchi, D., and V. Peragine. (2010). Inequality of opportunity in Italy. Journal of Economic Inequality 8(4): 429-50. • Duclos, J-Y., and A. Araar. (2006). Poverty and equity: Measurement, policy and estimation with DAD. New York, NY and Ottawa, ON, Canada: Springer, IDRC.WHO Technical Report. • Ersado, L. and M. Aran. (2014). Inequality of Opportunity among Egyptian Children. Policy Resarch Working Paper No. 7026. The World Bank • Ferreira, F., and J. Gignoux. (2008). The measurement of inequality of opportunity: Theory and an application to Latin America. The World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, NO. 4659. • Green, P.J. and T.J. Cole. (1992). Smoothing reference Centile Curves: The LMS Method and Penalized Likelihood. Statistics in Medicine. 11: 1305-1319. • Kraft, C. (2015). Determinants of Child health Disparities in Jordan. Economic Research Forum. Working Paper No. 950. • May, J. and I.M. Timaeus. (2014). Inequalities in under-five child nutritional Status in South Africa. What Progress has been made? Development Southern Africa. 31(6): 761-774 • MoH (2014). Policy and practice information for action. Better Information, Better Decesion, Better Health. Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, Ministry of Health, Quarterly Bulletin Ministry of Health. • Pradhan, M., D. Sahn, S. Younger. (2003). Decomposing world health inequality. Journal of Health Economics 22(2): 271-93. • Rigby, R.A. and D.M. Stasionopoulos. (2004a). Box-Cox t distribution for modeling skew and leptokurtotic data. Technical Report 01/04. STORM Research Centre, London Metropolitan University, London. • Roemer, J. (1998). Equality of Opportunity. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. • UNESCO. (2006). Education for all global monitoring report, 2007, strong foundations: early childhood care and education. United Nation, Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Paris. • WHO. (2006). Child Growth Standards: Methods and Development. World Health Organization. Technical Report. • WHO (2015). Success Factors for Women’s and the Child Health. Ministry of Health, Ethiopia. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/86592 |