Health Impacts of the Green Revolution: Evidence from 600,000 births across the Developing World
Jan von der Goltz, Aaditya Dar, Ram Fishman, Nathaniel D. Mueller, Prabhat Barnwal, Gordon C. McCord
Abstract
century? We provide global scale estimates of this relationship by constructing a novel, spatially-precise indicator of modern crop variety (MV) diffusion and leveraging child-level data from over 600,000 children across 21,604 sampling locations in 37 developing countries between 1961-2000. Results indicate that the diffusion of MVs reduced infant mortality by 2.4-5.3 percentage points (from a baseline of 18%), with stronger effects for male infants and among poor households. The sizable contribution of agricultural technology to improved welfare should inform global food and development policy.
Topics & Concepts
Green RevolutionDeveloping countryBaseline (sea)WelfareChild mortalityAgricultureChild healthChild survivalScale (ratio)Global healthEconomicsVariety (cybernetics)Agricultural economicsDevelopment economicsEnvironmental healthEconomic growthGeographyDemographyMedicineHealth carePolitical sciencePediatricsSociologyStatisticsCartographyMarket economyArchaeologyMathematicsLawEnergy and Environment ImpactsChild Nutrition and Water AccessAgricultural risk and resilience