Eating habits, food consumption, and health: The role of early life experiences

Effrosyni Adamopoulou, Elisabetta Olivieri, Eleftheria Triviza*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study explores the long-run effects of a temporary scarcity of a consumption good on preferences towards that good once the shock is over. Specifically, we focus on individuals who were children during World War II and assess the consequences of the temporary drop in meat availability they experienced early in life. To this end, we combine new hand-collected historical data on the number of livestock at the local level with microdata on eating habits, health outcomes, and food consumption expenditures. By exploiting cohort and regional variation in a difference-in-differences estimation, we show that individuals who as children were more exposed to meat scarcity tend to consume relatively more meat and spend more on food during late adulthood. Consistent with medical studies on the side effects of meat overconsumption, we also find that these individuals have a higher probability of being obese, having poor self-perceived health, and developing cancer. The effects are larger for women and persist intergenerationally, as the adult children of mothers who experienced meat scarcity similarly tend to overconsume meat. Our results point towards a behavioral channel, where early-life shocks shape eating habits, food consumption, and adult health.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104743
JournalEuropean Economic Review
Volume166
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024

Funding

Our thanks go to the editor, two anonymous referees, Anna Aizer, Pietro Biroli, Sandra Black, Antonio Ciccone, Gabriella Conti, Davide Dragone, Eleonora Fichera, Sergei Guriev, Jonathan James, Iris Kesternich, Joanna Kopinska, Simone Moriconi, Taryn Morrissey, Pia Pinger, Puja Singhal, Jan Stuhler, Michele Tertilt, Stephanie von Hinke, Joachim Winter, Nicolas Ziebarth, the participants at the NBER Conference on The Rise in Cardiovascular Disease Mortality, the Ifo Conference on Genes, Social Mobility, and Inequalities across the Life-Course, the Workshop \u201CWelfare across species\u201D in Paris, the Gender and Family Economics Webinar, the EuHEA virtual seminar, the EBS seminar, the University of Mainz brown bag seminar and the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich lunch seminar for useful comments. We are also grateful to Pratikshya Mohanty, Sabrina Montanari, and Cristina Somcutean for their excellent research assistance. Financial support from the German Research Foundation (through the CRC-TR-224 projects A3 and B5 and a Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Prize) is gratefully acknowledged. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the stance of the Bank of Italy. All the remaining errors are our own.

FundersFunder number
University of Mainz
Gender and Family Economics Webinar
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftCRC-TR-224
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

    Keywords

    • Early life experiences
    • Food consumption
    • Gender differences
    • Health
    • Preferences

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