Abstract
Efforts to manage Yugoslavia's debt crisis beginning in 1979 led to economic policies which resulted in declining real income in subsequent years. This has been associated with a slowing of the rate at which infant mortality has declined. There is no evidence, however, that populations in poor parts of the country experienced a more dramatic impact on infant mortality than did populations in more favored regions. The lack of difference is attributed to redistributive social policies among and within republics. © 1987.
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Kunitz, S. J., Simić, S., & Odoroff, C. L. (1987). Infant mortality and economic instability in Yugoslavia. Social Science and Medicine, 24(11), 953–960. https://doi.org/10.1016/0277-9536(87)90288-7
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