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The wealth of nations and the health of populations: A quasi-experimental design of the impact of sovereign debt crises on child mortality

The wealth of nations and the health of populations are intimately strongly associated, yet the extent to which economic prosperity (GDP per capita) causes improved health remains disputed. The purpose of this article is to analyze the impact of sovereign debt crises (SDC) on child mortality, using a sample of 57 low- and middle-income countries surveyed by the Demographic and Health Survey between the years 1990 and 2015. These surveys supply 229 household data and containing about 3 million childbirth history records. This focus on SDC instead of GDP provides a quasi-experimental moment in which the influence of unobserved confounding is less than a moment analyzing the normal fluctuations of GDP. This study measures child mortality at six thresholds: neonatal, under-one (infant), under-two, under-three, under-four, and under-five mortality. Using a machine-learning (ML) model for causal inference, this study finds that while an SDC causes an adverse yet statistically insignificant effect on neonatal mortality, all other child mortality group samples are adversely affected between a probability of 0.12 to 0.14 (all statistically significant at the 95-percent threshold). Through this ML, this study also finds that the most important treatment heterogeneity moderator, in the entire adjustment set, is whether a child is born in a low-income country.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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