2007
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0700035104
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Evidence on early-life income and late-life health from America's Dust Bowl era

Abstract: In recent decades, elderly Americans have enjoyed enormous gains in longevity and reductions in disability. The causes of this progress remain unclear, however. This paper investigates the role of fetal programming, exploring how economic progress early in the 20th century might be related to declining disability today. Specifically, we match sudden unexpected economic changes experienced in utero in America's Dust Bowl during the Great Depression to unusually detailed individual-level information about old-ag… Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…For example, van den Berg and colleagues (2006,2008,2009) find that macroeconomic conditions predict cohort's later mortality so that being born in a recession increases later mortality, at least among the 19 th and early 20 th century Danish and Dutch cohorts which were the subjects of these studies. Cutler et al (Cutler, Miller and Norton 2007), however, who focus on the effect of the 1930s great depression, do not find any health effects for later life. It may be that the link between macroeconomic conditions early in life and later health and mortality are not as strong in the 20 th century (and 21 st century) as they were historically.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, van den Berg and colleagues (2006,2008,2009) find that macroeconomic conditions predict cohort's later mortality so that being born in a recession increases later mortality, at least among the 19 th and early 20 th century Danish and Dutch cohorts which were the subjects of these studies. Cutler et al (Cutler, Miller and Norton 2007), however, who focus on the effect of the 1930s great depression, do not find any health effects for later life. It may be that the link between macroeconomic conditions early in life and later health and mortality are not as strong in the 20 th century (and 21 st century) as they were historically.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lindström (2000, 2003) used the transitory component of the local price of rye around birth and the local infant mortality rate. Van den Berg et al (2006) examined the state of the business cycle at early ages as determinants of all-cause individual mortality, using Dutch data on births during 1815-1902. Cutler et al (2007 looked at the Great Depression in the Dust Bowl area in the United States.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ow quickly economic agents adjust to changes in their environment is a central question in economics, and is consequential for policy design across many domains (Samuelson 1947;Viner 1958;Davis and Weinstein 2002;Cutler, Miller, and Norton 2007;Hornbeck 2012). The question has been a theoretical focus since at least Samuelson (1947), but has gained particular recent salience in the study of the economics of global climate change.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%