The impact of in utero malnutrition on “lost” births and neonatal mortality: Evidence from the 2002 food shortage in Malawi

Type Working Paper
Title The impact of in utero malnutrition on “lost” births and neonatal mortality: Evidence from the 2002 food shortage in Malawi
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
URL http://lup.lub.lu.se/luur/download?func=downloadFile&recordOId=4500105&fileOId=4500111
Abstract
This study aims to look at the link between in utero malnutrition and the
survival probabilities of fetuses and newborns, using the 2002 food shortages in Malawi
as an instrument for malnutrition. Concretely, it looks at differences in the probability of
a born child being a male and in neonatal mortality between children in utero affected
by food scarcity and those born right before and after the food shortages. The obtained
results show that there exist a link between intrauterine nutrition and early mortality.
Moreover, they suggest that malnutrition may lead to a process of positive selection as
early as in utero. Firstly, children are less likely to be males when belonging to food
shortage-affected cohorts. Secondly, children affected by food scarcity are less prone to
die within their first month of life. Both phenomena suggest that the cohort of children
born after having been affected by intrauterine malnutrition represent a positive
selection of what the cohort would have been in absence of the nutrition shock. These
results have several implications, the most relevant one being that nutritional
interventions targeting pregnant women may be a very cost-effective way of enhancing
the life paths of many individuals, especially in those countries that are still threatened
by food insecurity today.

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