Health, wealth, or equity? Trade-offs from households’ allocative decisions
Households’ allocative decisions have potentially large implications for the health and welfare of their members. We analyze a dataset of rural Bangladeshi households to estimate: (i) a benchmark level of nutritional adequacy that households could afford by selecting different foods and reallocating them among members, and (ii) the associated trade-offs in terms of income and equity preferences. Using a novel set of non-linear health production functions, we show that households can afford adequate diets that meet the clinical needs of nearly all nutrients. Micronutrient adequacy is primarily achieved by changing household-level food choices, while caloric adequacy depends more on intra-household food allocation. We further show that households do not face a clear health-income trade-off. Instead, we find a degree of inequality aversion (for energy) and inequality preference (for micronutrients) that leads to intra-household allocations that are not fully efficient from the perspective of the production of health.
Item Type | Article |
---|---|
Elements ID | 241097 |
Official URL | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2025.103560 |
Date Deposited | 03 Jul 2025 14:03 |
-
picture_as_pdf - Harris-Fry-etal-2025-Health-wealth-or-equity.pdf
-
subject - Published Version
-
error - This is an author accepted manuscript version of an article accepted for publication, and following peer review. Please be aware that minor differences may exist between this version and the final version if you wish to cite from it.
-
lock - Restricted to Repository staff only
-
- Available under Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0