身体质量中的机会不平等:来自澳大利亚的证据

Inequality of Opportunity in Body Mass: Evidence From Australia

Health Economics · 2025
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中文导读

利用澳大利亚2013和2017年面板数据,研究发现机会不平等解释了身体质量差异的10%-14%,其中父母社会经济地位是主要因素,且对女性影响更大。

Abstract

This paper extends current knowledge about inequality of opportunity in body mass in Australia. Drawing on 2013 and 2017 Household, Income, and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey data, our empirical strategy comprises of mean-based and unconditional quantile regression techniques. We find that inequality of opportunity accounts for a non-trivial share of body mass inequality. Our results based on waist-to-height ratio reveal estimates of 10%-14%, which are much larger than previously published estimates based on body mass index (BMI). Our estimates are lower-bound values based on 13 observable circumstance variables. Relaxing the homogeneity assumption, for instance, increases estimates by 1.7-3 percentage points. Applying the Shapley-Shorrocks decomposition procedure, age and parents' socio-economic status are identified as leading circumstance factors. This finding is refined when quantiles of the body mass distribution are evaluated. Age's role is diminished at the clinically risky upper quantiles. By contrast, parents' socio-economic status is the single most important circumstance factor at the upper quantiles. Investigating by gender groups, inequality of opportunity is greater among women than men, with parents' socio-economic status playing a critical role in this disparity. Taking a life course perspective, circumstances' influence shows weakening over time, while effort is more impactful at later life stages. Overall, our findings underscore that anti-obesity campaigns should tackle early life social inequality, in addition to empowering personal responsibility later in life.

机会不平等身体质量澳大利亚社会经济地位