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The Intergenerational Inequality of Health in China

Eriksson, Tor; Pan, Jay; & Qin, Xuezheng. (2013). The Intergenerational Inequality of Health in China. Working Paper E-2013-001. School of Economics,Peking University.

Eriksson, Tor; Pan, Jay; & Qin, Xuezheng. (2013). The Intergenerational Inequality of Health in China. Working Paper E-2013-001. School of Economics,Peking University.

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This paper estimates the intergenerational health transmission in China using the 1991-2009 China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) data. Three decades of persistent
economic growth in China has been accompanied by high income inequality, which may in turn be caused by the inequality of opportunity in education and health. In this paper, we find that there is a strong correlation of health status between parent and their offspring in both the urbanand rural sectors, suggesting the existence of intergenerational health inequality in China. The correlation is persistent with different health measures and various model specifications, and is robust when unobserved household heterogeneity is removed. We also find that the parents’ (especially the mothers’) socio-economic characteristics and environmental / health care choices are strongly correlated with their own and their children’s health, supporting the “nature-nurture interaction” hypothesis. The Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition further indicates that 15% to 27% of the rural-urban inequality of child health is attributable to the endowed inequality from their parents’ health. An important policy implication of our study is that the increasing inequality of income and opportunity in China can be ameliorated through the improvement of the current generation’s health status and living standards.




RPRT

Working Paper E-2013-001


Eriksson, Tor
Pan, Jay
Qin, Xuezheng



2013









School of Economics,Peking University






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