Where Have All the Young Men Gone? Using Gender Ratios to Measure Fetal Death Rates

Working Paper: NBER ID: w17434

Authors: Nicholas J. Sanders; Charles F. Stoecker

Abstract: Fetal health is an important consideration in the formation of health-based policy. However, a complete census of true fetal deaths is impossible to obtain. We present the gender ratio of live births as an under-exploited metric of fetal health and apply it to examine the effects of air quality on fetal health. Males are more vulnerable to side effects of maternal stress in utero, and thus are more likely to suffer fetal death due to pollution exposure. We demonstrate this metric in the context of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 (CAAA) which provide a source of exogenous variation in county-level ambient total suspended particulate matter (TSPs). We find that a standard deviation increase in annual average TSPs (approximately 35 μg/m³) decreases the percentage of live births that are male by 3.1 percentage points. We then explore the use of observed differences in neonatal and one-year mortality rates across genders in response to pollution exposure as a metric to estimate total fetal losses in utero. These calculations suggest the pollution reductions from the CAAA prevented approximately 21,000-134,000 fetal deaths in 1972.

Keywords: fetal health; gender ratios; air quality; pollution; Clean Air Act

JEL Codes: I12; Q51; Q53


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 (CAAA) (Q58)county-level ambient total suspended particulate matter (TSPs) (R59)
annual average TSP levels (Y10)gender ratio of live births (J16)
annual average TSP levels (Y10)fetal mortality rates among male fetuses (J13)
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 (CAAA) (Q58)fetal deaths prevented (J13)
annual average TSP levels (Y10)neonatal mortality rates (J13)
annual average TSP levels (Y10)one-year mortality rates (J17)

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