Using a difference-in-difference method and data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS), this paper attempts to quantify the intergenerational health effects on children in rural China of the 1959-1961 Great Famine. By differentiating mother, father, both parents, and none of parents exposed to famine, the analysis puts mother\u27s and father\u27s famine exposure in one unifying framework. Therefore, the methodology achieves identification without concern for multicollinearity and omitted variable bias found in the previous literature. The results imply that children with both parents born in the Great Famine are significantly shorter by 0.37 standard deviations (1.89 cm for boys and 1.78 cm for girls) compared to children with n...
We evaluate the long-term effects of famine on chronic diseases using China's Great Leap Forwar...
The Chinese Famine of 1959–1961 caused up to 30 million deaths. It varied in intensity across China ...
Using individual mortality records from three cohorts of newborns (1954-1958, 1959-1962, and 1963-19...
This paper, using a difference-in-differences method, tries to quantify the long-term effects of Chi...
The intergenerational effect of fetal exposure to malnutrition on cognitive ability has rarely been ...
The intergenerational effect of fetal exposure to malnutrition on cognitive ability has rarely been ...
In the past century, more people have perished from famine than from the two World Wars combined. Ma...
The Chinese famine of 1959-1961 was the largest in human history. We used data on 35,025 women born ...
The Chinese famine of 1959-1961 was the largest in human history. We used data on 35,025 women born ...
This paper estimates the long run impact of famine on survivors in the context of Chinas Great Famin...
An increasing literature examines the association between restricted fetal or early childhood growth...
Using retrospective mortality records for three cohorts of newborns (1956-1958, 1959-1961, and 1962-...
One of the largest famines in human history took place in China half a century ago. This disaster, l...
The Chinese Famine of 1959-1961 caused up to 30 million deaths. It varied in intensity across China ...
"An increasing literature examines the association between restricted fetal or early childhood growt...
We evaluate the long-term effects of famine on chronic diseases using China's Great Leap Forwar...
The Chinese Famine of 1959–1961 caused up to 30 million deaths. It varied in intensity across China ...
Using individual mortality records from three cohorts of newborns (1954-1958, 1959-1962, and 1963-19...
This paper, using a difference-in-differences method, tries to quantify the long-term effects of Chi...
The intergenerational effect of fetal exposure to malnutrition on cognitive ability has rarely been ...
The intergenerational effect of fetal exposure to malnutrition on cognitive ability has rarely been ...
In the past century, more people have perished from famine than from the two World Wars combined. Ma...
The Chinese famine of 1959-1961 was the largest in human history. We used data on 35,025 women born ...
The Chinese famine of 1959-1961 was the largest in human history. We used data on 35,025 women born ...
This paper estimates the long run impact of famine on survivors in the context of Chinas Great Famin...
An increasing literature examines the association between restricted fetal or early childhood growth...
Using retrospective mortality records for three cohorts of newborns (1956-1958, 1959-1961, and 1962-...
One of the largest famines in human history took place in China half a century ago. This disaster, l...
The Chinese Famine of 1959-1961 caused up to 30 million deaths. It varied in intensity across China ...
"An increasing literature examines the association between restricted fetal or early childhood growt...
We evaluate the long-term effects of famine on chronic diseases using China's Great Leap Forwar...
The Chinese Famine of 1959–1961 caused up to 30 million deaths. It varied in intensity across China ...
Using individual mortality records from three cohorts of newborns (1954-1958, 1959-1962, and 1963-19...