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NON-TECHNICAL SUMMARYChina has one of the longest weekly work hours in the world, and it is claimed that about 600,000 Chinese people die every year because of "Guolaosi" -death by overwork (Monet, 2014). The literature in several academic disciplines provides evidence that long work hours can be detrimental to health -particularly showing adverse health effects of long work hours on subjective health. However, this large body of literature is dominated by research in Western countries, and results are mixed with regards to objective health outcomes. For China especially, the empirical evidence of such a relationship between long work hours and health is limited to only three cross-sectional studies using subjective (self-reported) health measures. Moreover, the results of these studies are mixed.Thus, the aim of our study is to examine the impact of long work hours on health among Chinese employees aged 18-65. Using longitudinal data from the China Health and Nutrition survey (CHNS), this study is the most comprehensive analysis for China, where possible adverse health effects of overwork become an important health issue. We analyze a broad array of health measures, including not only measures of subjective health but also several measures of objective health (e.g., high blood pressure and obesity), and additionally explore several possible pathways through which long work hours could affect health. In particular, we assess the relation between long work hours and specific lifestyles, such as time spent sleeping, preparing meals, and engaging in physical activities.Our results indicate that working long (50+) hours per week has a small negative effect on self-reported health and slightly increases the probability of high blood pressure. Long work hours have diverse impacts on different aspects of individual lifestyles, yet magnitudes are small, and we find no significant relationship between long work hours and obesity. Overall, our results provide limited evidence that long work hours in China are seriously affecting health or lifestyles. The general conclusion of our analysis is that long work hours do not seem to have any strong effects on several commonly used subjective or objective measures of health. Nor do our results provide any evidence that long work hours significantly influence diets, physical activity, or sleep time. This contrasts strongly with existing e...