HTTP:: Smoking Tied to Malnutrition in the Developing World
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In rural Indonesia, smoking is a fairly common habit and can be met at every corner. However, because the region is so impoverished, there is little money for buying cigarettes, and a new study has revealed that most men who smoke there take money out of their families' food budget in order to satisfy their own needs, which contributes to children having a worse diet and imbalanced nutrition. The researchers, Steven Block and Patrick Webb of the Tufts University, say that the effects of smoking in this area, and others like it, go well beyond the harm that the men inflict upon themselves. The new investigation was conducted on about 30,000 homes in Java, Indonesia, most of which had occupants living well below the poverty level. The numbers are harsh. It would appear that in the basic rural family, where at least one smoker resides, up to ten percent of the family's budget goes on buying tobacco. Another 68 percent is spent on food, while the remaining 22 percent is spent o!
n other items that are neither food, nor tobacco. More details will be published in the October issue of the journal Economic Development and Cultural Change.âœThis suggests that 70 percent of the expenditures on tobacco products are financed by a reduction in food expenditures,â the autho...
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