“…Studies that have tried to disentangle these causal effects suggest that indeed unemployment raises the risk of disease or death in individuals who suffer it (Burgard et al, ; Sullivan & von Wachter, ; Tapia Granados et al, ), as well as ill health raises the probability of becoming unemployed (Martikainen & Valkonen, ; Valkonen & Martikainen, ). On the other hand, the pattern of mortality rising over trend in periods of prosperity and falling below trend in recessions, that is, oscillating procyclically, has been found in a variety of high‐income market economies (Ogburn & Thomas, ; Tapia Granados & Diez Roux, ; Eyer, ; Ruhm, ; Gerdtham & Ruhm, ; Ruhm, ; Haaland & Telle, ; Sen, ; Tapia Granados, , , ; Tapia Granados & Ionides, , ; Neumayer, ; Rolden et al, ; Lindo, ) as well as some middle‐income economies (Abdala et al, ; Gonzalez & Quast, , ; Lin, ). In many of these studies in which total mortality and mortality due to major causes of death have been found to oscillate procyclically, a countercyclical oscillation has been found in suicide rates, which usually rise when the economy deteriorates.…”