酒精中毒对劳动力市场影响的性别差异

Gender differences in labor market effects of alcoholism

American Economic Review · 1991
被引 103
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用大型社区样本数据,分析酒精中毒对男性和女性劳动力市场表现的不同影响,填补了该领域缺乏性别比较研究的空白。

Abstract

Little is known about the role of specific health problems in affecting labor market productivity. Even less is known about gender differences in the labor market effects of such health problems. Current knowledge of health effects is based largely on samples composed exclusively of men, a common practice in both economics and health research. In the latter case, even a congressional mandate to incorporate females in study samples is reputed to have had little effect (Patricia Schroeder, 1990). In this study, we attempt to determine the structure of gender differences in labor market responses to alcoholism. We use a relatively new data source that allows such comparisons by gender in a large community-based sample. Previous studies have established that there are significant gender differences in labor market behavior. Differences in prevalence rates of alcoholism by gender are also well established. It is estimated that 3 percent of females are currently suffering from alcoholism and twice that many have exhibited symptoms at some time; for males the numbers are 10 and 20 percent, respectively. There is some medical evidence to indicate that physiologically, women and men respond differently to alcohol. For example, a recent study suggests that women have greater vulnerability to the acute and chronic health conditions associated with alcoholism (Mario Frezza et al., 1990).

酗酒劳动力市场性别差异生产率