dc.description.abstract | This thesis is comprised of three self-contained essays, each of which attempts to understand the
early origins of inequality in “human capital”. Motivated by the unequal rise in rates of childhood
obesity over the past four decades, the first focusses on the relationship between socioeconomic
status and the incidence of overweight and obesity across childhood in a cohort of children born
in the UK between 2000 and 2002. It analyses the relationship between conditions as early as 9
months of age and the likelihood a child is overweight or obese at age 14, and then documents
how the contemporaneous relationship between parental income and weight and children’s weight
changes over time.
The second chapter then focusses on health more generally among the same cohort, and
estimates the developmental path of health over childhood. It also asks how health affects the
accumulation of cognitive and socio-emotional skills over the same period. Given evidence of the
link between health and socioeconomic status, doing so adds to the evidence on the early origins
of disparities in health and how they affect - or are affected by - skills. Because characteristics
like health and cognitive and socio-emotional skill cannot be measured perfectly, this chapter
uses recent methodological advances for estimating non-linear dynamic factor models to estimate
a model of child development that accounts for mismeasurement of children’s human capital and
the early environment.
Lastly, the third essay analyses the development of socio-emotional skills in cohort of
Peruvian children born in 1994. It also analyses how socio-emotional skills develop alongside
cognition and, in early adulthood at age 22, how they affect the likelihood of engagement in risky
behaviours. Over the past two decades, socio-emotional skills have been established as important
determinants of social and economic outcomes. This chapter uses the same methodology as in
Chapter 2 to understand their development, how they are affected by early circumstances and
whether they influence young adults’ behaviour. | en |