Rs. Frey et C. Field, The determinants of infant mortality in the less developed countries: A cross-national test of five theories, SOCIAL IND, 52(3), 2000, pp. 215-234
The infant mortality rate varies widely across the less developed countries
. Five macro-social change theories exist that can explain the variation of
the infant mortality rate across the less developed countries: modernizati
on theory, dependency/world-systems theory, gender stratification theory, e
conomic disarticulation theory, and developmental state theory. Although re
search supports the claims of each theoretical narrative, no single study e
xamines all five narratives simultaneously or is based on recent data. The
purpose of the research reported here was to fill this gap in the literatur
e by examining the simultaneous effects of industrialization, four alternat
ive measures of economic dependence, female educational attainment, economi
c disarticulation, state strength, and a control variable, Sub-Saharan Afri
can status, on the infant mortality rate for 59 less developed countries in
1991. Results of eight tests of the five theoretical narratives indicate t
hat industrialization, state strength, and three of the four measures of ec
onomic dependence have little net effect on infant mortality, whereas econo
mic disarticulation, female education, debt dependence, and Sub-Saharan Afr
ican status have the expected effects on infant mortality. Theoretical and
policy implications of the results are briefly discussed.