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The lasting damage to mortality of early-life adversity: evidence from the English famine of the late 1720s

Marc Klemp and Jacob Weisdorf

European Review of Economic History, 2012, vol. 16, issue 3, 233-246

Abstract: This paper explores the long-term impact on mortality of exposure to hardship in early-life. Using survival analysis, we demonstrate that birth during the great English famine of the late 1720s entailed an increased death risk throughout life among those who survived the famine years. Using demographic data from the Cambridge Group's Population History of England, we find the death risk at age 10 among the most exposed group—children born to English Midlands families of a lower socioeconomic rank—is up to 66 percent higher than that of the control group (children of similar background born in the 5 years following the famine). This corresponds to a loss of life expectancy of more than 12 years. However, evidence does not suggest that children born in the 5 years prior to the famine suffered increased death risk. Copyright , Oxford University Press.

Date: 2012
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Working Paper: The Lasting Damage to Mortality of Early-Life Adversity: Evidence from the English Famine of the late 1720s (2011) Downloads
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