Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index

Contrary to conventional wisdom, NHANES data indicate that the poor have never had a statistically significant higher prevalence of overweight status at any time in the last 35 years. Despite this empirical evidence, the view that the poor are less healthy in terms of excess accumulation of fat pers...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jolliffe, D.
Format: Journal Article
Language:EN
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5099
id okr-10986-5099
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-50992021-04-23T14:02:21Z Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index Jolliffe, D. Contrary to conventional wisdom, NHANES data indicate that the poor have never had a statistically significant higher prevalence of overweight status at any time in the last 35 years. Despite this empirical evidence, the view that the poor are less healthy in terms of excess accumulation of fat persists. This paper provides evidence that conventional wisdom is reflecting important differences in the relationship between income and the body mass index. The first finding is based on distribution-sensitive measures of overweight which indicates that the severity of overweight has been higher for the poor than the nonpoor throughout the last 35 years. The second finding is from a newly introduced estimator, unconditional quantile regression (UQR), which provides a measure of the income-gradient in BMI at different points on the unconditional BMI distribution. The UQR estimator indicates that the strongest relationship between income and BMI is observed at the tails of the distribution. There is a statistically significant negative income gradient in BMI at the obesity threshold and some evidence of a positive gradient at the underweight threshold. Both of these UQR estimates imply that for those at the tails of the BMI distribution, increases in income are correlated with healthier BMI values. 2012-03-30T07:31:16Z 2012-03-30T07:31:16Z 2011 Journal Article Econ Hum Biol 1873-6130 (Electronic) 1570-677X (Linking) http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5099 EN http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Journal Article
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language EN
relation http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo
description Contrary to conventional wisdom, NHANES data indicate that the poor have never had a statistically significant higher prevalence of overweight status at any time in the last 35 years. Despite this empirical evidence, the view that the poor are less healthy in terms of excess accumulation of fat persists. This paper provides evidence that conventional wisdom is reflecting important differences in the relationship between income and the body mass index. The first finding is based on distribution-sensitive measures of overweight which indicates that the severity of overweight has been higher for the poor than the nonpoor throughout the last 35 years. The second finding is from a newly introduced estimator, unconditional quantile regression (UQR), which provides a measure of the income-gradient in BMI at different points on the unconditional BMI distribution. The UQR estimator indicates that the strongest relationship between income and BMI is observed at the tails of the distribution. There is a statistically significant negative income gradient in BMI at the obesity threshold and some evidence of a positive gradient at the underweight threshold. Both of these UQR estimates imply that for those at the tails of the BMI distribution, increases in income are correlated with healthier BMI values.
format Journal Article
author Jolliffe, D.
spellingShingle Jolliffe, D.
Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
author_facet Jolliffe, D.
author_sort Jolliffe, D.
title Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
title_short Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
title_full Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
title_fullStr Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
title_full_unstemmed Overweight and poor? On the relationship between income and the body mass index
title_sort overweight and poor? on the relationship between income and the body mass index
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5099
_version_ 1764393938588794880