The Long-Term Consequences of the Global 1918 Influenza Pandemic: A Systematic Analysis of 117 IPUMS International Census Data Sets

Author: A B�hm, Alfred W Crosby, Beatriz Echeverri, Craig Garthwaite, D Herring, David J Barker, David Killingray, David Killingray, David M Cutler, Douglas Almond, Douglas Almond, Eckhard Koenen, Frank B Hobbs, Geoffrey W Rice, Gerardo Chowell, Gerardo Chowell, Gerardo Chowell, Gouzien, G�nther Fink, H Hunziker, James G Ellison, Jan Zanden, Jason M Fletcher, Jeffery K Taubenberger, John Mclane, John S Oxford, Juditha WWjcik, K Frey, K Mayer, K Patterson, Kevin Mccracken, Martin Karlsson, Ming-Jen Lin, Mridula Ramanna, Myron Echenberg, Niall P Johnson, Niall P Johnson, Nina Boberg-Fazlic, Nolf, Patrick Zylberman, R E Nelson, Reyn Ewijk, Ryan Brown, S Ansart, S Rosenfeld, Sebastian Vollmer, Siddharth Chandra, Sven Neelsen, Warren Vaughan, Wataru Iijima, Yoav Benjamini
Publisher: Elsevier BV

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Several country-level studies, including a prominent one for the United States, have identified long-term effects of in-utero exposure to the 1918 influenza pandemic (also known as the Spanish Flu) on economic outcomes in adulthood. In-utero conditions are theoretically linked to adult health and socioeconomic status through the fetal origins or Barker hypothesis. Historical exposure to the Spanish Flu provides a natural experiment to test this hypothesis. Although the Spanish Flu was a global phenomenon, with around 500 million people infected worldwide, there exists no comprehensive global study on its long-term economic effects. We attempt to close this gap by systematically analyzing 117 Census data sets provided by IPUMS International. We do not find consistent global long-term effects of influenza exposure on education, employment and disability outcomes. A series of robustness checks does not alter this conclusion. Our findings indicate that the existing evidence on long-term economic effects of the Spanish Flu is likely a consequence of publication bias

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