Abstract:
:This study investigates the lasting health effects of leaving school in a bad economy. Three empirical patterns motivate this study: Leaving school in a bad economy has persistent and negative career effects, career and health outcomes are correlated, and fluctuations in contemporaneous economic conditions affect health in the short-run. I draw data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 Age 40 Health Supplement. Members of my sample left school between 1976 and 1992. I find that men who left school when the school-leaving state unemployment rate was high have worse health at age 40 than otherwise similar men, while leaving school in a bad economy lowers depressive symptoms at age 40 among women. A 1 percentage point increase in the school-leaving state unemployment rate leads to a 0.5% to 18% reduction in the measured health outcomes among men and a 6% improvement in depressive symptoms among women.
journal_name
J Health Econjournal_title
Journal of health economicsauthors
Maclean JCdoi
10.1016/j.jhealeco.2013.07.003subject
Has Abstractpub_date
2013-09-01 00:00:00pages
951-64issue
5eissn
0167-6296issn
1879-1646pii
S0167-6296(13)00097-0journal_volume
32pub_type
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