Mortality, Land Size and Soil Quality in five parishes in Scania

Transcription

Mortality, Land Size and Soil Quality in five parishes in Scania
Mortality, Land Size and Soil Quality in five parishes in
th
Scania, Sweden, 19 century
S. Aradhya, N. Dan, M. Magnuson, N. van den Boomen
University of Lund, Department of Economic History
http://www.ekh.lu.se
Phone: +46 46-222 00 00
R ESEARCH QUESTION AND MAIN HYPOTHESES
M ETHODOLOGY
We are interested whether the hazard of dying decreased over time between 1813 and 1914,
depending on the soil type and property size of the plot people were living on.
• Individuals above the age of 5 followed
until death or censoring;
Did the mortality risk in Scania decrease over time during the period between 1813 and 1914, when
the soil condition and property size are taken into account?
• Three periods investigated: (1813 - 1859),
(1860 - 1889), (1890 - 1914);
Hypotheses:
• Six different soil categories plus two categories (unknown,unlinked);
- Mortality risk decreased over time from 1700 onwards due to improvements in health and
nutrition status, which in turn leads to improved life expectancy and higher agricultural productivity in subsequent generations;
- Large plot of lands with poor soil condition demanded more labor and energy input to have a
sufficient yield;
- Hard labor and poor energetic expenditure, accompanied by malnutrition and poor control of
infectious diseases, led to poor health status.
• Square km/property;
• Standard controls (BirthYear, Parish, SES,
Sex);
• Estimating the models using Cox regression;
• Database: Scania Economic Demographic
Database.
D ATA I NTERPRETATION
The three maps show the variation in time and space of population density of hamlets (Address Name Codes). The density is defined as person
years per squared kilometer, the average yearly density is displayed as averaged by the periods (1813-1859, 1860-1889, and 1890-1914). The density
varied considerably between hamlets but it does not show a cluster of hamlets that return no counts in southeastern Sireköping after 1890. All years
were placed into 1813-1859 quantiles in order to see density increases over
time in the hamlets.
Visualization of a dominate soil type in the five parishes which we
would hypothesize to have a low mortality density.
C ONCLUSIONS AND FURTHER WORK
Conclusions
• Mortality risk in Scania declined in the period between 1813 and 1914;
• There seems to be no statistically significant association between mortality risk and the interaction between soil and property size;
• We do find evidence that certain soil categories are associated with higher mortality risks.
Further work:
• Thorough study of the changes in the virulence of pathological agents;
• More detailed analysis of soil distribution within property holding;
• Map topology and density is a challenge when working with SEDD’s dataset;
• Spatial and tabular linkage require the variable AdressNameCode and not the variable PropId;
• Geographic information work is required to successfully analyze density at the sub-parish
level.
R EFERENCES
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the European Historical Economics Society, Dublin, September 2-3
2011, and the Economic History Association, Boston, September 911 2011.
(2) M.L. Cohen, "Changing patterns of infectious diseases", Nature, 406
(2000) 762-767.
(3) R.W. Fogel, "Economic growth, population theory, and physiology: The
bearing of long-term processes on the making of economic policy", Working
paper National Bureau of Economic Research Cambridge MA (1994).
(4) R.W. Fogel, "Nutrition and decline in mortality since 1700: some preliminary findings" , Working paper National Bureau of Economic Research Cambridge MA (1984).
(5) R.W. Fogel and N. Grotte, "An overview of the changing body: Health,
nutrition, and human development in the Western world since 1700",
Working paper National Bureau of Economic Research Cambridge
MA (2011).
(6) C. Lundh, "The social mobility of servants in rural Sweden, 17401894", Continuity and Change 14 1 (1999) 57-89.
(7) M. Olsson and P. Svensson, "Agricultural growth and institutions:
Sweden, 1700-1860", European Review of Economic History 14 2, 275304.