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Childhood obesity in developing countries is a topic that hasn’t found its way in the economic literature yet. Despite the fact that obesity rates are rising worldwide and the phenomenon is very present even among the poorest of households in developing countries, most of the attention is...
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perceived as a reliable signal of wealth rather than beauty and health. Second, being obese facilitates access to credit: in a …
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status for children and adults using 1988-94 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data. The measures …The Nutrition and Health Characteristics of Low-Income Populations study examined several measures of body weight …
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cash transfer (CT), in Lesotho. We show that the poorest households do not increase investment in children's human capital … CTs might not be always effective to support the investment in children's human capital of the poorest households. Beside …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012303225
The rather small literature on obesity in developing countries mainly uses descriptive statistics and cross section analysis to focus on rising income levels as the source of rapidly increasing obesity rates. This paper uses a new panel dataset comprised of WHO and World Bank data for 126 low-...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011422896
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can be considered as being healthy, then a combination of different health programs can be successful. …
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