Social Capital and Consumption Smoothing: Panel Data Evidence from Northern Ethiopia

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fredu Nega Tegebu
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bethelhem Legesse Debela ◽  
Gerald E. Shively ◽  
Stein T. Holden

AbstractFood-based transfer programs have the potential to change diets or alter basic crop mixes. This study empirically investigates the associations between participating in food-for-work (FFW) programs and the diversity of food consumption and production. Four waves of panel data from the Tigray Region of Northern Ethiopia, covering the period 2001–2010, are used to estimate a series of panel data regressions. A dose-response model is used to measure how the intensity of FFW participation aligns with dietary outcomes. Results show that FFW participants had greater household dietary diversity compared with non-participants, with an average magnitude equivalent to one-fifth of a standard deviation in the food variety score. When items directly provided by the FFW program are excluded from the variety score, the overall effect is statistically weaker, but similar in sign and magnitude, suggesting modest “crowding in” of dietary diversity from FFW participation. FFW participation was not correlated with changes in production diversity, suggesting that the labor demands of the program did not alter crop choice. Findings have relevance for interventions that aim to improve food security and promote dietary quality in low-income populations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Oshio ◽  
Kemmyo Sugiyama

Abstract Background: The adverse impact of caregiving on caregivers’ mental health and the positive impact of social capital (SC) on health are both well understood. This study examined the moderating effect of SC on the association between family caregiving and caregivers’ psychological distress (PD).Methods: We used longitudinal data from 27,869 individuals born between 1946 and 1955. The data were collected from a 14-wave nationwide longitudinal survey conducted from 2005 to 2018. We estimated dynamic panel data (DPD) models, which could control for an individual’s time-invariant attributes in a dynamic framework. We did this to examine how SC moderated the association between informal caregiving and a caregiver’s PD (defined by a Kessler score of 13 or higher). We also examined how the results varied over time, as the caregiver’s age advanced.Results: Of the respondents aged 50–73 years, 12.5% of women and 8.4% of men provided care to their older parents or spouses. The DPD model results showed that the onset of caregiving increased the probability of PD (M 3.4%) by 2.1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.6%–2.7%) and 1.1% (95% CI: 0.5%–1.6%) for women and men, respectively. SC moderated the association between caregiving and a caregiver’s PD by 53.4% (95%: 30.4%–76.4%) and 84.9% (95% CI: 62.0%–107.8%) for women and men, respectively. We also observed that the moderating effect of SC on a caregiver’s PD increased as the caregiver’s age advanced in both women and men, preventing a deterioration in the psychological impact of caregiving. Conclusions: The results underscore the moderating effect of SC on the association between caregiving and PD. This suggests the need to keep family caregivers from being socially isolated, especially as they get older.


2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kamrul Islam ◽  
Juan Merlo ◽  
Ichiro Kawachi ◽  
Martin Lindström ◽  
Kristina Burström ◽  
...  

We test whether individual health status is related to area-level social capital measured by rates of voting participation in municipal political elections, controlling for personal characteristics, where health status is measured by mapping responses to interview survey questions into the generic health-related quality of life measure (HRQoL) the EQ-5D in order to derive the health state scores. The analysis is based on unbalanced panel data from Statistic Sweden's Survey of Living Conditions (the ULF survey) and a 3-level multilevel regression analysis, where level 1 consists of a total of 31,585 observations for 24,419 individuals at level 2 nested within 275 Swedish municipalities at level 3. We find that the health state scores increase significantly with municipality election rates. This result is robust to a number of measurement and specification issues explored in a sensitivity analysis. However, almost all variation in health status exists across individuals (more than 98%), which demonstrates that even if social capital (and other contextual variables) may be significant it is of less importance, at least at the municipality level in Sweden.


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