Artigo Revisado por pares

MONEY TRANSFER AND BIRTH WEIGHT: EVIDENCE FROM THE ALASKA PERMANENT FUND DIVIDEND

2015; Wiley; Volume: 54; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/ecin.12235

ISSN

1465-7295

Autores

Wankyo Chung, Hyungserk Ha, Beomsoo Kim,

Tópico(s)

Health disparities and outcomes

Resumo

Abstract The positive relationship between income and health is well established. However, the direction of causality remains unclear: do economic resources influence health, or vice versa? Exploiting a new source of exogenous income variation, this study examines the impact of the Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend ( APFD ) on newborns' health outcomes. The results show that income has a significantly positive, but modest effect on birth weight. We find that an additional $1,000 ($2,331 in 2011 dollars) increases birth weight by 17.7 g and substantially decreases the likelihood of a low birth weight (a decrease of around 14% of the sample mean). Furthermore, the income effect is higher for less‐educated mothers. Based on a gestation‐weight profile in the sample, increased gestation owing to the APFD could explain a maximum of 34%–57% of the measured weight increase, although we are unable to examine all the potential mechanisms. ( JEL I10, I18, I12)

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