2016
DOI: 10.1002/hec.3391
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The Lasting Health Impact of Leaving School in a Bad Economy: Britons in the 1970s Recession

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 … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In a sample of Europeans ages 50 to 74, Hessel and Avendano (2013), on the other hand, detect better physical functioning in men but worse health in women who graduated in an economic situation characterized by a high national unemployment rate. While Garrouste and Godard (2016) also suggest a damaging effect of leaving school in a bad economy (namely, the 1970s recession in the United Kingdom) on women’s health, they do not find any evidence indicating a beneficial effect for men. The study by Cutler et al (2015), which is based on several rounds of Eurobarometer data, is the only one reporting no statistically significant gender differences.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…In a sample of Europeans ages 50 to 74, Hessel and Avendano (2013), on the other hand, detect better physical functioning in men but worse health in women who graduated in an economic situation characterized by a high national unemployment rate. While Garrouste and Godard (2016) also suggest a damaging effect of leaving school in a bad economy (namely, the 1970s recession in the United Kingdom) on women’s health, they do not find any evidence indicating a beneficial effect for men. The study by Cutler et al (2015), which is based on several rounds of Eurobarometer data, is the only one reporting no statistically significant gender differences.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…While the relationship between unemployment and health is likely to be bi-directional, there is strong evidence that unemployment has causal impacts on health, and mental health in particular (Bartelink et al, 2020;Clark et al, 2001;Daly and Delaney, 2013;Gebel and Voßemer, 2014;Korpi, 2001;Mousteri et al, 2018). For young people, unemployment can be particularly damaging, with evidence of 'scarring' effects of early unemployment on lifetime employment and earnings, on socioeconomic outcomes such as marriage and fertility, and health (Garrouste and Godard, 2016;Schwandt and von Wachter, 2019;Strandh et al, 2014;von Wachter, 2020).…”
Section: Notementioning
confidence: 99%