Health Selection and the Process of Social Stratification: The Effect of Childhood Health on Socioeconomic Attainment

Author:

Haas Steven A.1

Affiliation:

1. Steven Haas recently joined the faculty of the School of Social and Family Dynamics at Arizona State University as an Assistant Professor of Population Dynamics, having completed a fellowship as a Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholar at the Harvard School of Public Health. His research examines the processes that generate health inequalities over the life course. His current projects include an investigation of the influence of childhood health and socioeconomic status on trajectories of aging,...

Abstract

This study investigates whether childhood health acts as a mechanism through which socioeconomic status is transferred across generations. The study uses data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to track siblings and to estimate fixed-effects models that account for unobserved heterogeneity at the family level. The results demonstrate that disadvantaged social background is associated with poor childhood health. Subsequently, poor health in childhood has significant, direct, and large adverse effects on educational attainment and wealth accumulation. In addition, childhood health appears to have indirect effects on occupational standing, earnings, and wealth via educational attainment and adult health status. The results further show that socioeconomic health gradients are best understood as being embedded within larger processes of social stratification.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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