Abstract
The phenomenon of a stature convergence across Italian regions during the second half of the twentieth century evidenced higher increases in stature in southern areas, which were initially characterized by height lower than the national average. However, this trend is also affected by the massive migratory flow of people from southern to northern Italy in the 1950s-60s, which greatly slowed the rate of increase in mean height in the receiving regions, since immigrants were on average shorter than the local residents.
Based on conscripts' micro-data (1951 and 1980 cohorts), we aim to estimate the contribution of South-North migrations on over-estimation of the height convergence of southern and island areas. We exploit the dataset which includes a representative sample of 111,834 Italian conscripts born in 1951 and 162,295 born in 1980.
Results indicate that migrations may explain about 20-25 percent of the high speed of convergence of stature across areas of Italy in the 1950s and 1960s, whereas lack of identification of migration flows yields an over-estimation of the well-being changes in people living in the South of Italy.
confirm funding
Event ID
17
Paper presenter
51 628
Type of Submissions
Poster session only
Language of Presentation
English
Weight in Programme
1 000
Status in Programme
1
Submitted by donatella.lanari on