The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality

Fish stocks have decreased substantially over the last decades due to human exploitation of the ocean. This declining trend has been exacerbated by climate change, with acidifying waters harming marine life. This paper exploits exogenous variation in water acidity across time and space to study how...

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Main Author: Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://ncid.unav.edu/en/research/working-papers/wp032020
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:nva:unnvaa:wp03-2020 2024-04-14T08:17:47+00:00 The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras http://ncid.unav.edu/en/research/working-papers/wp032020 unknown http://ncid.unav.edu/en/research/working-papers/wp032020 preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:34:15Z Fish stocks have decreased substantially over the last decades due to human exploitation of the ocean. This declining trend has been exacerbated by climate change, with acidifying waters harming marine life. This paper exploits exogenous variation in water acidity across time and space to study how the ocean impacts early-childhood mortality. We collate and analyze more than 1.5 million births between 1972 and 2018 in communities near the shore of 36 developing countries. By comparing children born in the same location but on different dates and controlling for a set of high-dimensional fixed effects, we identify the causal impact of in utero exposure to the ocean’s acidity on mortality. In coastal areas, a 0.01 unit increase in acidity causes 2 additional neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births. This result is robust to within-siblings comparisons. It is selectively affecting the weakest children as the effect gradually vanishes after the first month of life. Mothers do not compensate with any additional health investment during the gestation period. Reduced access to nutrients derived from fish that are essential to fetal growth is the key mechanism behind our findings. While fish is critical to global food security, humanity’s relationship with the ocean remains poorly understood. This paper provides the first quantitative evidence linking the exploitation of natural resources with malnutrition and neonatal selection. Child, Mortality, Neonatal, Health, Climate Change, Ocean, Acidification, Nutrition. Report Ocean acidification RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Fish stocks have decreased substantially over the last decades due to human exploitation of the ocean. This declining trend has been exacerbated by climate change, with acidifying waters harming marine life. This paper exploits exogenous variation in water acidity across time and space to study how the ocean impacts early-childhood mortality. We collate and analyze more than 1.5 million births between 1972 and 2018 in communities near the shore of 36 developing countries. By comparing children born in the same location but on different dates and controlling for a set of high-dimensional fixed effects, we identify the causal impact of in utero exposure to the ocean’s acidity on mortality. In coastal areas, a 0.01 unit increase in acidity causes 2 additional neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births. This result is robust to within-siblings comparisons. It is selectively affecting the weakest children as the effect gradually vanishes after the first month of life. Mothers do not compensate with any additional health investment during the gestation period. Reduced access to nutrients derived from fish that are essential to fetal growth is the key mechanism behind our findings. While fish is critical to global food security, humanity’s relationship with the ocean remains poorly understood. This paper provides the first quantitative evidence linking the exploitation of natural resources with malnutrition and neonatal selection. Child, Mortality, Neonatal, Health, Climate Change, Ocean, Acidification, Nutrition.
format Report
author Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras
spellingShingle Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras
The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
author_facet Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras
author_sort Alex Armand, Ivan Kim Taveras
title The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
title_short The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
title_full The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
title_fullStr The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
title_full_unstemmed The Ocean and Early-Childhood Mortality
title_sort ocean and early-childhood mortality
url http://ncid.unav.edu/en/research/working-papers/wp032020
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://ncid.unav.edu/en/research/working-papers/wp032020
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