糟糕经济环境下离校的持久健康影响:1970年代经济衰退中的英国人

The Lasting Health Impact of Leaving School in a Bad Economy: Britons in the 1970s Recession

Health Economics · 2016
被引 5
人大 A-

中文导读

研究1973年石油危机后立即进入劳动力市场的低学历英国人,发现糟糕经济条件对女性健康有长期损害,对男性影响不明显。

Abstract

This paper investigates whether leaving school in a bad economy deteriorates health in the long run. It focuses on low-educated individuals in England and Wales who entered the labour market immediately after the 1973 oil crisis. Our identification strategy relies on the comparison of individuals who left school at the compulsory age, were born in the same year and had a similar quantity of education - but whose school-leaving behaviour in different years (hence, different economic conditions) was exogenously implied by compulsory schooling laws. We provide evidence that, unlike school-leavers who did postpone their entry into the labour market during the recessions of the 1980s and 1990s, pupils' decisions to leave school at the compulsory age immediately after the 1973 oil crisis were not endogenous to the contemporaneous economic conditions at labour-market entry. We use a repeated cross section of individuals over the period 1983-2001 from the General Household Survey and adopt a lifecourse perspective, from 7 to 26 years after school-leaving. Our results show that poor economic conditions at labour-market entry are particularly damaging to women's health. For men, the health impact of poor economic conditions at labour-market entry is less obvious and not robust to all specifications. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

经济衰退离校长期健康影响年石油危机