Economics and human biology | 2019

Chain effects of clean water: The Mills-Reincke phenomenon in early 20th-century Japan.

 
 

Abstract


This study explores the validity of chain effects of clean water, which are known as the Mills-Reincke phenomenon, in early 20-century Japan. Recent studies have reported that water purifications systems are responsible for huge contributions to human capital. Although some studies have investigated the instantaneous effects of water-supply systems in pre-war Japan, little is known about the chain effects of these systems. By analyzing city-level cause-specific mortality data from 1922 to 1940, we find that a decline in typhoid deaths by one per 1000 people decreased the risk of death due to non-waterborne diseases such as tuberculosis and pneumonia by 0.742-2.942 per 1000 people. Our finding suggests that the observed Mills-Reincke phenomenon could have resulted in the relatively rapid decline in the mortality rate in early 20-century Japan.

Volume 36
Pages \n 100822\n
DOI 10.1016/j.ehb.2019.100822
Language English
Journal Economics and human biology

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