Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5057028 | Economics & Human Biology | 2013 | 8 Pages |
This paper proposes a benchmark for comparing SES gradients across countries, based on gross domestic product apportioned to members of differing wealth categories within countries. Using this approach, we estimate absolute wealth in 360 populations in 36 developing countries and model its relationship with overweight (BMI â¥Â 25) among non-pregnant women ages 18-49. A simple model based on absolute wealth alone strongly predicts odds of overweight (R2 = 0.59), a relationship that holds both between countries and between different groups in the same country (10 populations for each of 36 countries). Moreover, world region modifies this relationship, accounting for an additional 22% of variance (R2 = 0.81). This allows us to extract a basic pattern: rising rates of overweight in lower and middle income countries closely track increasing economic resources, and the shape of that gradient differs by region in systematic ways.
⺠We model absolute wealth and overweight prevalence in 360 worldwide populations in 36 low- and middle-income countries. ⺠A straightforward functional relationship holds both within and between countries. ⺠Countries also vary substantially in the shape of the wealth-overweight relationship. ⺠The majority of between-country variation is accounted for by world region.