Aksan, Anna-Maria and Chakraborty, Shankha (2014): Mortality versus Morbidity in the Demographic Transition. Forthcoming in: European Economic Review
This is the latest version of this item.
Preview |
PDF
TwinTransitions.pdf Download (1MB) | Preview |
Abstract
The link between the mortality and epidemiological transitions is used to identify the effect of the former on the fertility transition: a mortality transition that is not accompanied by improving morbidity causes slower demographic and economic change. In a model where children may die from infectious disease, childhood health affects human capital and noninfectious-disease-related adult mortality. When child mortality falls from lower prevalence, as it did in western Europe, labor productivity improves, fertility falls and the economy prospers. When it falls mainly from better cures, as it has in sub-Saharan Africa, survivors are less healthy and there is little economic growth. The model can quantitatively explain sub-Saharan Africa’s experience. More generally it shows that the commonly used indicator, life expectancy at birth, is a poor predictor of population health and economic growth unless morbidity falls with mortality.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Mortality versus Morbidity in the Demographic Transition |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Demographic Transition, Epidemiological Transition, Mortality, Morbidity, Fertility |
Subjects: | I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I10 - General I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I12 - Health Behavior J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J13 - Fertility ; Family Planning ; Child Care ; Children ; Youth O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O4 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity > O40 - General |
Item ID: | 56905 |
Depositing User: | Shankha Chakraborty |
Date Deposited: | 28 Jun 2014 06:04 |
Last Modified: | 27 Sep 2019 11:53 |
References: | Acemoglu, D. and S. Johnson (2007), ``Disease and Development: The Effect of Life Expectancy on Economic Growth'', Journal of Political Economy, 115 (6), 925-985. Akachi, Y. and D. Canning (2010), ``Health trends in Sub-Saharan Africa: Conflicting evidence from infant mortality rates and adult heights'', Economics & Human Biology, 8: 273-288. Aksan, A. and S. Chakraborty (2013), ``Childhood Disease Burden and the Precautionary Demand for Children'', Journal of Population Economics, 26 (3): 855-885. Almond D. (2006), ``Is the 1918 Influenza pandemic over? Long-term effects of in utero influenza exposure in the post-1940 US population'', Journal of Political Economy, 114: 672-712. Angeles, L. (2010), ``Demographic Transitions: Analyzing the Effects of Mortality on Fertility", Journal of Population Economics, 23: 99-120. Arora, S. (2005), ``On epidemiologicalal and economic transitions: a historical view'', in Health and Economic Growth: Findings and Policy Implications, edited by G. Lopez Casasnovas, B. Rivera and L. Currais, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. Barker, D.J.P. (1994), Mothers, babies, and disease in later life. London: British Medical Journal Publishing Group. Bar, Michael and Oksana Leukhina (2010), “Demographic transition and industrial revolution: A macroeconomic investigation”, Review of Economic Dynamics, 13(2), 424-451. Bhattacharya, J. and S. Chakraborty (2014), “Contraception and the Fertility Transition”, MPRA Paper No. 53129. Birchenall, J. (2007), ``Escaping High Mortality'', Journal of Economic Growth, 12: 351-387. Bleakley, H. (2007), ``Disease and development: Evidence from hookworm eradication in the American South'', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 122 (1): 73-117. Bleakley, H. (2010), ``Malaria Eradication in the Americas: A Retrospective Analysis of Childhood Exposure'', American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, Vol. 2, pp. 1-45. Bleakley, H. and F. Lange (2009), ``Chronic disease burden and the interaction of education, fertility and growth'', Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 91, pp. 52-65. Boldrin,Michele and Larry E. Jones(2002), "Mortality,fertility,and saving in a Malthusian economy,” Review of Economic Dynamics, 5(4): 775-814. Bozzoli, C., A. Deaton, C. Quintana-Domeque (2009), ``Adult Height and Childhood Disease'', Demography, 46 (4): 647-669. Broadberry, S. and A. Klein (2011), ``Aggregate and per capita GDP in Europe, 1870-2000: Continental, Regional and National Data with Changing Boundaries'', working paper, University of Warwick. Case, A. and C. Paxson (2010), ``Causes and Consequences of Early-Life Health'', Demography, 47 (Supplement): S65. Cervellati, M. and Sunde U. (2011), “Life Expectancy and Economic Growth: The Role of the Demographic Transition,” Journal of Economic Growth, 16, 99-133. Chakraborty, S., C. Papageorgiou and F. Perez-Sebastian (2010), ``Diseases, Infection Dynamics and Development'', Journal of Monetary Economics, 57 (7): 859-872. Chang, S., Fleisher, B., Kim, S. and S. Liu (2011), ``Long-term Effects of Early Childhood Malaria Exposure on Education and Health: Evidence from Colonial Taiwan'', IZA Discussion Paper No. 5526. Coelho, P. and R. McGuire (2000), ``Diets Versus Diseases: The Anthropometrics of Slave Children'', The Journal of Economic History, 60: 232-246. Costa, D.L. (2003), ``Understanding mid-life and older age mortality declines: evidence from Union Army veterans'', Journal of Econometrics, 112 (1): 175-192. Crimmins, E.M. and C.E. Finch (2006), ``Infection, Inflammation, Height, and Longevity'', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 103: 498-503. Cutler, D., Fung, W., Kremer, M., Singhal, M. and T. Vogl (2007), ``Mosquitoes: The Long-term Effects of Malaria Eradication in India'', NBER Working Paper No. 13539. De la Croix, D. and O. Licandro (2012), ``The Child is Father of the Man: Implications for the Demographic Transition'', Economic Journal, forthcoming. Demombynes, G. and S.F. Trommlerova (2012), ``What has driven the decline of infant mortality in Kenya?'', World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, No. 6057. Doepke, M. (2005), ``Child Mortality and Fertility Decline: Does the Barro-Becker Model Fit the Facts?'' ournal of Population Economics, 18: 337-366. Ewbank, D. C. and J. N. Gribble (eds.) (1993), Effects of Health Programs on Child Mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, National Academic Press, Washington D.C. Fogel, R. (1997), “New Findings on Secular Trends in Nutrition and Mortality: Some implications for population theory”, in M. Rosenzwig and O. Stark (eds.) Handbook of Population and Family Economics, vol. 1A, Elsevier Science, The Netherlands. Galor, O. (2005), ``From Stagnation to Growth: Unified Growth Theory'', in Handbook of Economic Growth, Vol. 1A, P. Aghion and S. N. Durlauf (eds). North Holland: Elsevier, 171-293. Guerrant, R.L., B. Carneiro-Filho, and Dillingham, R.A. (2003), ``Cholera, Diarrhea, and Oral Rehydration Therapy: Triumph and Indictment'', Clinical Infectious Diseases, 37: 398-405. Guinnane, T.W.(2011),“The historical fertility transition: A guide for economists”,Journal of Economic Literature, 49(3), 589-614. Haveman, R. and B. Wolfe (1995), ``The Determinants of Children's Attainments: A Review of Methods and Findings,'' Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 33(4): 1829-1878. Hansen, C.W. (2014), “Cause of death and development in the US”, Journal of Development Economics, forthcoming. Herzer,D.,Strulik,H.,and Vollmer, S.(2012),“The long-run determinants of fertility: one century of demographic change 1900–1999”, Journal of Economic Growth, 17(4), 357-385. Hong, S. C. (2007), ``The Burden of Early Exposure to Malaria in the United States, 1850-1860: Malnutrition and Immune Disorders'', Journal of Economic History, 67: 1001-1035. John, A. M. (1990), "Transmission and Control of Childhood Infectious Diseases: Does Demography Matter?" Population Studies, 44: 195-215. Jousilahti, P., J. Tuomilehto, E. Vartiainen, J. Eriksson, and P. Puska (2000), ``Relation of Adult Height to Cause-specific and Total Mortality: A Prospective Follow-up Study of 31,199 Middle-aged Men and Women in Finland'', American Journal of Epidemiology, 151 (11): 1112-1120. Kalemli-Ozcan,S. (2002),“Does the Mortality Decline Promote Economic Growth?”, Journal of Economic Growth, 7(4), 411-439. Lagerlöf, Nils-Petter (2003), “From Malthus to Modern Growth: Can Epidemics Explain the Three Regimes?”, International Economic Review, 44: 755-777. Lorentzen,P., McMillan,J., Wacziarg,R.(2008),“Death and development”, Journal of Economic Growth, 13(2), 81-124. Leeder, S., S. Raymond and H. Greenberg (2003), “A Race Against Time: The Challenge of Cardiovascular Disease in Developing Economies”, Center for Global Health and Eco- nomic Development, Columbia University and University of Sydney. Martorell, R. and Habicht, J.P. (1986), ``Growth in early childhood in developing countries'', in F. Falkner and J.M. Tanner (eds) Human Growth: A Comprehensive Treatise, Vol.3, New York and London: Plenum Press, 241-263. Mazumder, B., D. Almond, K. Parka, E. M. Crimmins and C. E. Finch (2010), ``Lingering prenatal effects of the 1918 influenza pandemic on cardiovascular disease'', Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, 1 (1): 26-34. Moradi, A. (2006), ``The nutritional status of women in Sub-Saharan Africa, 1950-1980'', Department of Economics, University of Oxford. Morand, O. (2004), ``Economic growth, longevity and the epidemiological transition'', European Journal of Health Economics, 5 (2): 1-9. Murray, C. J. L. and L. C. Chen (1992), ``Understanding Morbidity Change'', Population and Development Review, 18 (3): 481-503. Sahn, D. and R. Bernier (1995), ``Have structural adjustments led to health sector reform in Africa?'', Health Policy, 32: 193-214. Soares, R. (2005), “Mortality Reductions, Educational Attainment, and Fertility Choice”, American Economic Review, 95(3), 580-601. Soares, R. (2007), ``On the Determinants of Mortality Reductions in the Developing World'', Population and Development Review, 33 (2): 247-287. Snow, R.W., Craig, M.H., Newton, C.R.J.C., and Steketee, R.W. (2003), ``The public health burden of Plasmodium falciparum malaria, in Africa: Deriving the numbers'', Washington DC: The Disease Control Priorities Project (DCPP) Working Paper Number 11, vol 75. Strulik, Holger and Jacob Weisdorf (2014), “How Child Costs and Survival Shaped the Industrial Revolution and the Demographic Transition”, Macroeconomic Dynamics, 18 (1): 114-144. Szreter, S. (1988), ``The importance of social intervention in Britain's mortality decline c.1850-1914: a reinterpretation of the role of Public Health'', Social History of Medicine, 1: 1-38. Voth, H. and T. Leunig (1996), ``Did Smallpox reduce Height? Stature and the Standard of Living in London, 1770-1873'', Economic History Review, XLIX (3): 541-560. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/56905 |
Available Versions of this Item
-
Twin Transitions. (deposited 23 Sep 2013 06:56)
- Mortality versus Morbidity in the Demographic Transition. (deposited 28 Jun 2014 06:04) [Currently Displayed]