tarozzifig2b.png
VoxEU Column Development Health Economics

Child height and intergenerational transmission of health: Evidence from Indian migrants in England

Data typically show that people become progressively taller as living standards improve. But despite impressive recent rates of economic growth, India remains one of the worst-performing countries in terms of height. Using data from Indian and English health surveys, this column reveals that, conditional on parents’ height, children of Indian ethnicity are on average taller when born and raised in England rather than in India. The results provide evidence against the importance of genetic factors in explaining the disappointing growth performance of Indian children.

Historical data typically show that over time, people become progressively taller as living standards improve. For instance, between 1870 and 1970 Western European men grew taller by an average of more than 1cm per decade (Hatton and Bray 2010). There is extensive evidence that early-life conditions have a powerful and hard-to-reverse effect on adult height and that taller individuals enjoy, on average, better health and labour-market outcomes (see Strauss and Thomas 2007 for a review). The returns to physical strength can be particularly large in developing countries, where agriculture is prevalent. Taller individuals are also, on average, more likely to have approached their ‘genetic potential’ (the maximum height they could achieve given their genetic traits), an achievement that usually goes hand in hand with a healthy epidemiological environment and adequate nutrition while in utero and during growth.

Despite impressive rates of economic growth in recent decades, India remains one of the worst-performing countries worldwide in terms of height, among both children and adults. For instance, according to recently released estimates from the 2015-16 National Family Health Survey (NFHS), 38% of Indian children were stunted (that is, they had low height given age and gender) and about 36% were underweight. The prevalence of wasting (low weight given height) actually slightly increased (from 20% to 21%) between 2005-06 and 2015-16. Such high rates of malnutrition, especially among children under the age of five, remain one of the most debated and salient stains in India’s development performance.

Researchers have recently proposed a number of likely contributing factors, ranging from the role of sanitation (Spears 2012), women's health and social status (Coffey et al. 2015, Coffey 2015a, Coffey 2015b), son preference (Jayachandran and Pande 2015), and eating habits (Bhalotra et al. 2010, Atkin 2013, 2016). The hypothesis that genetic factors are potentially important in explaining the widespread presence of small stature among Indian children relative to accepted international standards has been rejected by most scholars, although it has recently resurfaced in some circles (Panagariya 2013). Other scholars have suggested that the slow convergence of the height of Indian children to widely accepted international height standards may partly reflect physiological factors that generate strong persistence in low height even under rapidly improving economic conditions. Such ‘gradual catch-up’, as hypothesised by Deaton and Drèze (2009), may emerge because child height is influenced by birthweight and this, in turn, is highly correlated with mother's weight and height.

In recent work, we use data from the NFHS and from the Health Survey of England (HSE) to look at the height of children and adults of Indian ethnicity who live in England (Tarozzi and Alacevich 2016). Of course, ethnic Indians who migrated to England are not a representative sample of the Indian population, and indeed we estimate that ethnic Indian adults were on average 6-7 centimetres taller in England than in India. This shows strong evidence of positive selection into migration to England, which is also consistent with recent research [NG2] showing that ethnic Indians in the UK outperform most other ethnic minorities, and in some dimensions even natives, in terms of both labour-market outcomes and schooling achievements (see for instance Dustmann et al. 2011). However, despite such positive selection relative to country of origin, we also find that ethnic Indian adults were less tall than native British ‘whites’. These patterns are illustrated in Figure 1.

Figure 1 Adult heights

Source: Authors' estimations from NFHS-3 (2005-06), HSE 1999 and HSE 2004. Each point represents the average height of individuals, labelled as in the legend, whose reported year of birth was included in the 5-year interval centred on the year labelled in the horizontal axis. Each point estimate is shown included within its 95% confidence interval. For men (panel A) sample sizes are 44,467 (NFHS-3), 548 (HSE, Indians) and 2,515 (HSE, Whites), while for women (panel B) they are respectively 80,346, 662 and 3,204.

But our most striking finding is that when we look at young children (2 to 4 years old) of Indian ethnicity, born and raised in England, we find not only that they were taller than children in India, as for adults, but also that they were as tall as British White children (Figure 2).  Even conditional on mother and father’s height, children of Indian ethnicity were about 6% taller when born and raised in England rather than in India. Interestingly, this similarity in height between ethnic groups exists despite the fact that ethnic Indian children in England had substantively lower birth weight than Whites (by about 0.4 kilograms on average), which can be partly explained by their mothers having smaller body size.

Figure 2 Child heights

Source: Authors' estimations from NFHS-3 (2005-06), HSE 1999 and HSE 2004. Each point represents the average height of children, by age. Point estimates are shown included within their 95% confidence interval. For boys (panel A) sample sizes are 14,760 (NFHS-3), 77 (HSE, Indians) and 326 (HSE, Whites), while for girls (panel B) they are respectively 13,527, 65 and 328.

Nature and nurture affect height potentials

Our results thus provide evidence against the importance of genetic factors in explaining the disappointing growth performance of Indian children, and are consistent with the possibility of rapid catch-up to the standards observed among children born and raised in the context of a richer and healthier socioeconomic environment, such as that observed in England. On the other hand, our results are exploratory and a number of limitations need to be highlighted.

First, we have shown that ethnic Indian adults in England are much taller than in India. This shows that there is very strong positive selection in height of ethnic Indian immigrants, and we cannot exclude that there may also be selection in genetic potential for height. In other words, we cannot infer from our results that the gap with young White children in England would on average disappear if (rather implausibly) the average conditions in England could be replicated across India.

Second, and related, children under five have been the focus of much of the debate on the poor health status of Indian children, and in this age group we find no systematic disadvantage between ethnic Indians and Whites in England. However, even among ethnic Indians born in England, we do find a gap at older ages, approximately after puberty. At this stage, we do not have convincing evidence to explain such patterns, but a conjecture is that they could be related to the large disadvantage that we observe in their birthweight. However, it is also impossible to exclude that genetic factors play a role, also because recent genetic research shows that the fraction of the variation in height explained by genetic factors increases from 20–50% in infancy to 70–90% among adolescents and adults (Dubois et al. 2012). Unfortunately, we do not observe the achieved adult height of the young children in our sample, so we cannot determine if, as adults, their height will be comparable to that of the native White population.

Third, despite the over-sampling of ethnic minorities in the HSE data, the number of children of Indian ethnicity measured in England remains very small. This leads to imprecise estimates, although in most cases the gaps between populations are so large that the null of equality between average heights can be rejected at standard levels. In subsequent work, however, we have found identical patterns using a larger sample of children of different ethnicity in the UK.  The Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) is a panel of about 19,000 children born in 2000, and also includes a large sample of children of Indian ethnicity. Consistent with our earlier findings, we found that despite significantly lower birthweight, children of Indian ethnicity of both genders are about as tall (in some cases taller) than British whites (see Figure 3).

Figure 3: Child height

Source: Author’s calculations from Millennium Cohort Survey

Last but not least, we do not speak to why we observe such rapid catch-up – whether it is better nutrition, pre- or post-natal care, breastfeeding practices or epidemiological environment for the mother and the child. Plausibly, the effect encompasses to some extent all of the above explanations, and we plan to explore these hypotheses in future work.

Editors’ note: This column is funded under the grant “Policy Design and Evaluation Research in Developing Countries" Initial Training Network (PODER), which is funded under the  Marie Curie Actions of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (Contract Number: 608109)

References

Atkin, D (2013). “Trade, tastes and nutrition in India.” American Economic Review 103 (5), 1629–1663.

Atkin, D (2016). “The caloric costs of culture: evidence from Indian migrants.” American Economic Review. 106 (4), 1144–1181.

Bhalotra, S, C Valente and A van Soest (2010). “The puzzle of Muslim advantage in child survival in India.” Journal of Health Economics 29 (2), 191–204.

Case, A and C Paxson (2008). “Stature and Status: Height, Ability, and Labor Market Outcomes.” Journal of Political Economy, 116(3), 499-532.

Coffey, D (2015a). “Early life mortality and height in Indian states.” Economics and Human Biology 17, 177-189.

Coffey, D (2015b). “Prepregnancy body mass and weight gain during pregnancy in India and sub-Saharan Africa.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 (11), 3302-3307.

Coffey, D, R Khera and D Spears (2016). “Intergenerational effects of women's status: Evidence from joint Indian households.” Working Paper.

Dubois, L, K Ohm Kyvik, M Girard, F Tatone-Tokuda, D Pérusse, J Hjelmborg, A Skytthe, F Rasmussen, M J Wright, P Lichtenstein and N G Martin (2012). “Genetic and environmental contributions to weight, height, and BMI from birth to 19 years of age: an international study of over 12,000 twin pairs.” PLoS ONE 7 (2), 1–12.

Dustmann, C, T Frattini and N Theodoropoulos (2011). “Ethnicity and second generation immigrants.” In: Gregg, P., Wadsworth, J. (Eds.), The Labour Market in Winter: the State of Working Britain. Oxford University Press (Chapter 15).

Hatton, T, and B Bray (2010). “Long-run trends in the heights of European men, 19th–20th centuries.” Economics and Human Biology 8, 405–413.

Jayachandran, S and R Pande (2016). “Why are Indian children so short? The Role of Birth Order and Son Preference.” Forthcoming, American Economic Review.

Panagariya, A (2013). “Does India really suffer from worse child malnutrition than sub-Saharan Africa?” Economic and Political Weekly 48 (18), 98–111.

Spears, D (2013). “How much international variation in child height can sanitation explain?” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 6351.

Strauss, J and D Thomas (2008). “Health over the life course.” In T. P. Schultz and J. Strauss (Eds.), Handbook of Development Economics, Volume IV, Chapter 54. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science.

Tarozzi, A and C Alacevich (2016). “Child Height and Intergenerational Transmission of Health: Evidence from Indian Migrants in England.” Forthcoming, Economics and Human Biology.

5,249 Reads