1. Economic policy and the double burden of malnutrition: cross-national longitudinal analysis of minimum wage and women’s underweight and obesity
- Author
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Conklin, Annalijn I, Ponce, Ninez A, Crespi, Catherine M, Frank, John, Nandi, Arijit, and Heymann, Jody
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Nutrition ,Obesity ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Zero Hunger ,Adult ,Body Weight ,Developing Countries ,Economics ,Female ,Humans ,Income ,Longitudinal Studies ,Malnutrition ,Middle Aged ,Nutritional Status ,Poverty ,Salaries and Fringe Benefits ,Thinness ,Young Adult ,Economic policy ,Minimum wage ,Weight status ,Multilevel analysis ,Women ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nutrition & Dietetics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine changes in minimum wage associated with changes in women's weight status.DesignLongitudinal study of legislated minimum wage levels (per month, purchasing power parity-adjusted, 2011 constant US dollar values) linked to anthropometric and sociodemographic data from multiple Demographic and Health Surveys (2000-2014). Separate multilevel models estimated associations of a $10 increase in monthly minimum wage with the rate of change in underweight and obesity, conditioning on individual and country confounders. Post-estimation analysis computed predicted mean probabilities of being underweight or obese associated with higher levels of minimum wage at study start and end.SettingTwenty-four low-income countries.SubjectsAdult non-pregnant women (n 150 796).ResultsHigher minimum wages were associated (OR; 95 % CI) with reduced underweight in women (0·986; 0·977, 0·995); a decrease that accelerated over time (P-interaction=0·025). Increasing minimum wage was associated with higher obesity (1·019; 1·008, 1·030), but did not alter the rate of increase in obesity prevalence (P-interaction=0·8). A $10 rise in monthly minimum wage was associated (prevalence difference; 95 % CI) with an average decrease of about 0·14 percentage points (-0·14; -0·23, -0·05) for underweight and an increase of about 0·1 percentage points (0·12; 0·04, 0·20) for obesity.ConclusionsThe present longitudinal multi-country study showed that a $10 rise in monthly minimum wage significantly accelerated the decline in women's underweight prevalence, but had no association with the pace of growth in obesity prevalence. Thus, modest rises in minimum wage may be beneficial for addressing the protracted underweight problem in poor countries, especially South Asia and parts of Africa.
- Published
- 2018