Obesity, income and gender: The changing global relationship

Obesity is considered one of the major health concerns of the 21st century and is frequently associated with economic development. This paper reviews evidence on internal (within countries) and external (across countries) relationships between obesity, income and gender. Obesity changes with income,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Global food security Vol. 23; pp. 267 - 281
Main Authors: Ameye, Hannah, Swinnen, Johan
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-12-2019
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Summary:Obesity is considered one of the major health concerns of the 21st century and is frequently associated with economic development. This paper reviews evidence on internal (within countries) and external (across countries) relationships between obesity, income and gender. Obesity changes with income, but in a non-linear way. On average, obesity increases with income in poor countries, has no relationship with income in middle-income countries and decreases with income for rich countries. Within countries, obesity is concentrated among richer groups in low-income countries and evenly distributed in middle-income countries. In high-income countries, the poor are the most obese. The relationship differs for men and women. Women are more obese in low-income countries and much more obese in middle-income countries. The gender obesity gap disappears in high-income economies. The geographic concentration of obesity also changes with income growth: from urban areas in poor countries to rural areas in rich countries. Despite these patterns, total obesity rates continue to increase in all countries, and for the world as a whole. •Obesity is one of the major health concerns of the 21st century and is frequently associated with economic development.•On average, obesity rates increase with income, flatten out and then decrease again for high-income countries.•Obesity is concentrated among the rich in low-income countries and among the poor in high-income countries.•Women are more obese in low- and middle-income countries, but the gender gap disappears in high-income economies.•The geographic concentration of obesity changes from urban areas in poor countries to rural areas in rich countries.
ISSN:2211-9124
2211-9124
DOI:10.1016/j.gfs.2019.09.003