Maruyama Shiko, Nakamura Sayaka
Economics Discipline Group, University of Technology Sydney, PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW, 2007, Australia.
School of Economics, Nagoya University, Furocho, Chikusa, Nagoya, 464-8601, Japan.
Econ Hum Biol. 2018 Sep;30:1-13. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2018.04.002. Epub 2018 Apr 22.
Women have a lower BMI than men in developed countries, yet the opposite is true in developing countries. We call this the gender BMI puzzle and investigate its underlying cause. We begin by studying time trends in Japan, where, consistent with the cross-country puzzle, the BMI of adult women has steadily decreased since the 1950s, whereas the BMI of adult men has steadily increased. We study how changes in energy intake and energy expenditure account for the over-time gender BMI puzzle using the Japanese National Nutrition Survey from 1975 to 2010, which provides nurse-measured height and weight and nutritionist-assisted food records. Because long-term data on energy expenditure do not exist, we calculate energy expenditure using a steady-state body weight model. We then conduct cross-country regression analysis to corroborate what we learn from the Japanese data. We find that both energy intake and energy expenditure have significantly decreased for Japanese adult men and women and that a larger reduction in energy expenditure among men than women accounts for the increasing male-to-female BMI gap. Trends in BMI and energy expenditure vary greatly by occupation, suggesting that a relatively large decrease in physical activity in the workplace among men underlies the gender BMI puzzle. The cross-country analysis supports the generalizability of the findings beyond the Japanese data. Furthermore, the analysis suggests the increasing male-to-female BMI gap is driven not only by a reduction in the energy requirements of physically demanding work but also by weakening occupational gender segregation. No support is found for other explanations, such as increasing female labor force participation, greater female susceptibility to malnutrition in utero, and gender inequality in nutrition in early life.
在发达国家,女性的体重指数(BMI)低于男性,但在发展中国家情况却相反。我们将此称为性别BMI谜题,并对其潜在原因进行调查。我们首先研究日本的时间趋势,在那里,与跨国谜题一致,成年女性的BMI自20世纪50年代以来稳步下降,而成年男性的BMI则稳步上升。我们利用1975年至2010年的日本国家营养调查来研究能量摄入和能量消耗的变化如何解释长期的性别BMI谜题,该调查提供了护士测量的身高和体重以及营养师协助的食物记录。由于不存在关于能量消耗的长期数据,我们使用稳态体重模型来计算能量消耗。然后我们进行跨国回归分析,以证实我们从日本数据中学到的内容。我们发现,日本成年男性和女性的能量摄入和能量消耗均显著下降,男性能量消耗的下降幅度大于女性,这解释了男女BMI差距不断扩大的原因。BMI和能量消耗的趋势因职业而异,这表明男性在工作场所体力活动的相对大幅减少是性别BMI谜题的根源。跨国分析支持了这些发现在日本数据之外的普遍性。此外,分析表明,男女BMI差距的扩大不仅是由于体力要求高的工作的能量需求减少,还由于职业性别隔离的减弱。未发现其他解释的支持证据,如女性劳动力参与率的提高、女性在子宫内更容易营养不良以及早期生活中营养方面的性别不平等。