Personal tools
You are here: Home / Publications / Socioeconomic determinants of children's health in Russia: a longitudinal study

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Socioeconomic determinants of children's health in Russia: a longitudinal study

Fedorov, Leonid Ilych; & Sahn, David E. (2005). Socioeconomic determinants of children's health in Russia: a longitudinal study. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53(2), 479-500.

Fedorov, Leonid Ilych; & Sahn, David E. (2005). Socioeconomic determinants of children's health in Russia: a longitudinal study. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 53(2), 479-500.

Octet Stream icon 37.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1103 bytes)

This article explores dynamic links among the health status of children, measured by standardized height, socioeconomic characteristics of their parents and communities, and related shocks, using a 4-period-long panel of children from Russia's Longitudinal Monitoring Survey. Specific attention is given to the endogenous effect of lagged height on current height, which can be thought of as the catch-up effect or the lingering effect of poor health. We find that while such an effect is significant, it is substantially smaller than that typically found in the literature. It is also shown that exploring the dynamic relationship between health and socioeconomic factors allows for a better understanding of the impacts of time-varying socioeconomic variables on child growth.




JOUR



Fedorov, Leonid Ilych
Sahn, David E.



2005


Economic Development and Cultural Change

53

2

479-500







10.1086/425378



37