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For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America
by
Noy, Shiri
in
Adjustment
/ At risk populations
/ Bank loans
/ Banking
/ Caribbean Region
/ Child
/ Children
/ Criticism
/ Developing Countries
/ Development Economics
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Economics
/ Epidemiology
/ Expenditures
/ Finance
/ Financial institutions
/ Funding
/ Governance for health
/ Health
/ Health policy
/ Health promotion
/ Health services
/ Health Services Research
/ Health status
/ Human capital
/ Human rights
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant health services
/ Infant Mortality
/ Infants
/ International financial institutions
/ International organizations
/ Investments
/ Laboratories
/ Latin America
/ LDCs
/ Loans
/ Maternal and infant welfare
/ Maternal characteristics
/ Maternal health services
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mixed methods research
/ Mortality rates
/ Mothers
/ Neoliberalism
/ Patient outcomes
/ Policies
/ Population
/ Productivity
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research methodology
/ Social Policy
/ Structural adjustment
/ Structural adjustment programs
/ Trends
/ World Bank
2021
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For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America
by
Noy, Shiri
in
Adjustment
/ At risk populations
/ Bank loans
/ Banking
/ Caribbean Region
/ Child
/ Children
/ Criticism
/ Developing Countries
/ Development Economics
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Economics
/ Epidemiology
/ Expenditures
/ Finance
/ Financial institutions
/ Funding
/ Governance for health
/ Health
/ Health policy
/ Health promotion
/ Health services
/ Health Services Research
/ Health status
/ Human capital
/ Human rights
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant health services
/ Infant Mortality
/ Infants
/ International financial institutions
/ International organizations
/ Investments
/ Laboratories
/ Latin America
/ LDCs
/ Loans
/ Maternal and infant welfare
/ Maternal characteristics
/ Maternal health services
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mixed methods research
/ Mortality rates
/ Mothers
/ Neoliberalism
/ Patient outcomes
/ Policies
/ Population
/ Productivity
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research methodology
/ Social Policy
/ Structural adjustment
/ Structural adjustment programs
/ Trends
/ World Bank
2021
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For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America
by
Noy, Shiri
in
Adjustment
/ At risk populations
/ Bank loans
/ Banking
/ Caribbean Region
/ Child
/ Children
/ Criticism
/ Developing Countries
/ Development Economics
/ Economic conditions
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Economics
/ Epidemiology
/ Expenditures
/ Finance
/ Financial institutions
/ Funding
/ Governance for health
/ Health
/ Health policy
/ Health promotion
/ Health services
/ Health Services Research
/ Health status
/ Human capital
/ Human rights
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infant health services
/ Infant Mortality
/ Infants
/ International financial institutions
/ International organizations
/ Investments
/ Laboratories
/ Latin America
/ LDCs
/ Loans
/ Maternal and infant welfare
/ Maternal characteristics
/ Maternal health services
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mixed methods research
/ Mortality rates
/ Mothers
/ Neoliberalism
/ Patient outcomes
/ Policies
/ Population
/ Productivity
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative analysis
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research methodology
/ Social Policy
/ Structural adjustment
/ Structural adjustment programs
/ Trends
/ World Bank
2021
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For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America
Journal Article
For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America
2021
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Overview
Background
The World Bank wields immense financial and normative power in health in the developing world. During the 1980s and 1990s, in the face of intense criticism of its structural adjustment policies, the World Bank purportedly turned its attention to “pro-growth and pro-poor” policies and new lending instruments. One focus has been an investment in maternal and infant health. My analysis uses a mixed methods approach to examine the relationship between traditional structural adjustment and health loans and projects and infant mortality in Latin America and the Caribbean from 2000 to 2015.
Results
My answer to whether the World Bank’s projects in Latin America worked “for the children” is: somewhat. The results are heartening in that quantitatively, health projects are associated with lower infant mortality rates, net of controls, whereas traditional structural adjustment loans do not appear to be negatively associated with infant mortality, though examined across a short time horizon. Qualitative data suggest that infants, children, and mothers are considered in World Bank loans and projects in the context of an economic logic: focusing on productivity, economic growth, and human capital, rather than human rights.
Conclusion
Taken together, my results suggest that the World Bank appears to, at least partially, have amended its approach and its recent work in the region is associated with reductions in infant mortality. However, the World Bank’s economistic approach risks compartmentalizing healthcare and reducing people to their economic potential. As such, there remains work to do, in Latin America and beyond, if health interventions are to be effective at sustainably and holistically protecting vulnerable groups.
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