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Title: Food Prices, Access to Food Outlets and Child Weight Outcomes: A Longitudinal Analysis
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Powell, Lisa M.
Bao, Yanjun
Food Prices, Access to Food Outlets and Child Weight Outcomes: A Longitudinal Analysis
Working Paper, Department of Economics, University of Illinois at Chicago, May 2007
Cohort(s): Children of the NLSY79
Publisher: Department of Economics, University of Illinois at Chicago
Keyword(s): Body Mass Index (BMI); Child Health; Data Linkage (also see Record Linkage); Geocoded Data; Geographical Variation; Modeling, Fixed Effects; Nutritional Status/Nutrition/Consumption Behaviors; Obesity; Weight

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

This study examines the importance of food prices and restaurant and food store outlet availability for child body mass index (BMI) and ordered categorical weight outcomes. We use child-mother merged files from the 1979 cohort of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth combined with fast food and fruit and vegetable price data obtained from the American Chamber of Commerce Researchers Association and outlet density data on fast food and full-service restaurants and supermarkets, grocery stores and convenience stores obtained from Dun & Bradstreet. We estimate naïve ordinary least squares, random-effects and child fixed-effects BMI models and generalized ordered probit and random-effects generalized ordered probit models of underweight, normal weight, overweight, and obesity for children aged 6 to 17. We also estimate separate models by children's age and race, family income, and mother's education status. Accounting for unobserved heterogeneity using random-effects estimation models, we find that a 10% increase in the price of fruits and vegetables increases BMI by 0.5% and lowers the prevalence of obesity by 4%. The price of fast food and the availability of restaurants and food stores are not found to be statistically significantly related to children's BMI or obesity. However, higher fast food prices are found to be weakly statistically significantly related to lower BMI among older children. Further analyses by sub-groups find the BMI of children in lower income families and those with lower educated mothers to be particularly sensitive to the price of fruits and vegetables suggesting that targeted subsidies for healthful foods may be an effective policy instrument for addressing child obesity in low-socioeconomic status families.
Bibliography Citation
Powell, Lisa M. and Yanjun Bao. "Food Prices, Access to Food Outlets and Child Weight Outcomes: A Longitudinal Analysis." Working Paper, Department of Economics, University of Illinois at Chicago, May 2007.