Monday, November 26, 2007

Obesity in Developing Countries? Part II

More on the association between early life circumstances and later obesity. Check out this new working paper by Anne Case and Alicia Menendez on gender differences in obesity in South Africa. Here is the abstract (emphasis mine):

Globally, men and women face markedly different risks of obesity. In all but of handful of (primarily Western European) countries, obesity is more prevalent among women than men. In this paper, we examine several potential explanations for this phenomenon. We analyze differences between men and women in reports and effects of the proximate causes of obesity -- physical exertion and food intake -- and the underlying causes of obesity -- childhood and adult poverty, depression, and attitudes about obesity. We evaluate the evidence for each explanation using data collected in an African township outside of Cape Town. Three factors explain the greater obesity rates we find among women. Women who were nutritionally deprived as children are significantly more likely to be obese as adults, while men who were deprived as children face no greater risk. In addition, women of higher adult socioeconomic status are significantly more likely to be obese, which is not true for men. These two factors can fully explain the difference in obesity rates we find in our sample. Finally (and more speculatively), women's perceptions of an 'ideal' female body are larger than men's perceptions of the 'ideal' male body, and individuals with larger 'ideal' body images are significantly more likely to be obese.

3 comments:

Valli said...

I don't know if we can generalize this to the US, but women here do not have a larger body ideal than men. I'm not sure if this is true in other countries, but this is not true among my (fairly conservative, middle class) Indian cousins. In fact, all late-afternoon gossip was filled with stories of so-and-so's sister-in-law losing SO much weight on this wheat-only/eggs-only/go-lytely only diet.

Valli said...

wait, did I just give you another example for your "salience of personal experience" post?

Atheendar said...

Nope, I think you make a valid point. A lot of this is context dependent, and the story could be different in other countries. What I think is noteworthy here is not the generalizability but the fact that the results are consistent with biological theory. Of course, its not the best test of those theories, but the paper represents a decent start.