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RETRACTED: Income Shocks and Child Mortality Rates: Evidence from Fluctuations in Oil Prices Cover

RETRACTED: Income Shocks and Child Mortality Rates: Evidence from Fluctuations in Oil Prices

By: Catalina Rivero and  Pedro Acuna  
Open Access
|Jun 2021

Abstract

Previous studies show that children in lower socioeconomic status families reveal higher rates of mortality. We complement the income-mortality literature by establishing a causal link between income and child mortality. Our instrument for income is based on time-series global shocks to oil prices combined with the cross-sectional share of employment in manufacturing across US states as their exposure to oil price changes. Using the universe of death records between the years 1975-2004, we find the OLS results of income-child-mortality relationships are under-biased. The 2SLS-IV results suggest that a $1,000 increase in income per capita at the state level reduces child mortality and infant mortality by 0.87 and 0.53 fewer incidences per 1,000 population of age-specific children.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/eoik-2021-0002 | Journal eISSN: 2303-5013 | Journal ISSN: 2303-5005
Language: English
Page range: 69 - 83
Submitted on: Jan 13, 2021
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Accepted on: Jan 31, 2021
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Published on: Jun 4, 2021
Published by: Oikos Institut d.o.o.
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 3 issues per year

© 2021 Catalina Rivero, Pedro Acuna, published by Oikos Institut d.o.o.
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.