Child height in India: Facts and interpretations from the NFHS-4, 2015-16
Article Type
Research Article
Publication Title
Economic and Political Weekly
Abstract
An analysis of child height-for-age using the newly released data from the National Family Health Survey-4 indicates that the average child height increased by about four-tenths of a height-for-age standard deviation between 2005 and 2015. Although important, this increase is small relative to India's overall height deficit, and relative to economic progress; children in India remain among the shortest in the world. It is unsurprising that the increase in height-for-age has been modest because none of the principal factors responsible for India's poor child height outcomes have substantially improved over the last decade. Familiar patterns of regional, sex, and caste disadvantage are reflected in child height in 2015.
First Page
87
Last Page
94
Publication Date
8-4-2018
Recommended Citation
Coffey, Diane and Spears, Dean, "Child height in India: Facts and interpretations from the NFHS-4, 2015-16" (2018). Journal Articles. 1278.
https://digitalcommons.isical.ac.in/journal-articles/1278