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Revisiting the relationship between wages and sleep duration: The role of insomnia. | LitMetric

Revisiting the relationship between wages and sleep duration: The role of insomnia.

Econ Hum Biol

Department of Economics, University of Ottawa, 120 University Private, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study analyzes data from the 2005 and 2010 Canadian General Social Surveys to explore how wages impact sleep duration among workers, highlighting that increased wages generally lead to less sleep.
  • A 10% wage increase is associated with a weekly decrease of 11-12 minutes of sleep, but the effect varies based on gender, sleep issues, and economic conditions.
  • The research finds that insomniacs experienced the most significant changes in sleep duration during the 2010 economic downturn, and female non-insomniacs were particularly responsive to wage changes when accounting for selection bias.

Article Abstract

This paper uses the 2005 and 2010 Canadian General Social Surveys (Time Use) to investigate the effect of wages on the sleep duration of individuals in the labour force. The endogeneity of wages is taken into account with an instrumental variables approach; we find that the wage rate affects sleeping time in general, corroborating Biddle and Hamermesh's (1990) main conclusion. A ten percent increase in the wage rate leads to an 11-12min decrease in sleep per week. But this number masks several effects. The responsiveness of sleep time to wage rate changes depends upon the sex of the individual, whether or not sleep problems are present and general economic conditions. By far the largest adjustment is found for insomniacs in 2010, a year of general economic downturn in Canada. We also investigate the non-randomness of insomnia in the population by using a Heckman procedure, and find that the sleep time of female non-insomniacs is even more responsive to wage rate changes once account is taken of this selection bias, but otherwise selection was not a problem in our samples.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2016.11.010DOI Listing

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