242 results match your criteria: "Institute of Labor Economics[Affiliation]"
Front Psychol
September 2021
School of Economics and Finance, Victoria Business School, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Previous research has shown that people care less about men than about women who are left behind. We show that this finding extends to the domain of labor market discrimination: In identical scenarios, people judge discrimination against women more morally bad than discrimination against men. This result holds in a representative sample of the US population and in a larger but not representative sample of Amazon Mechanical Turk (Mturk) respondents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Clim Chang
October 2021
Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi, India.
Tools are needed to benchmark carbon emissions and pledges against criteria of equity and fairness. However, standard economic approaches, which use a transparent optimization framework, ignore equity. Models that do include equity benchmarks exist, but often use opaque methodologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGrowth Change
December 2021
Department of Economics Program for the Study of Midwest Markets and Entrepreneurship (PSMME), Center for Agricultural and Rural Development (CARD), Iowa State University Ames IA USA.
rUsing customized panel data spanning the entire year of 2020, we analyze the dynamics of working hours and household income across different stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. Like many other countries, during this period, the Netherlands experienced a quick spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, adopted a set of fairly strict social distancing measures, gradually reopened, and imposed another lockdown to contain the second wave. We show that socioeconomic status is strongly related to changes in working hours, especially when strict economic restrictions are in place.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aims: Previous research has investigated the impact of diet on cognition, but the focus has often been on general cognition. This paper reports on a preregistered cross-sectional study aimed at testing for specific executive function differences across individuals who self-reported one of four distinct dietary patterns: , , , or pattern. Our hypotheses were aimed at testing whether adherence to a specialty diet improved decision making relative to those who reported following .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Health Econ
April 2022
ARC Centre of Excellence for Children and Families Over the Life Course, Brisbane, Australia.
Social support is increasingly acknowledged as an important resource for promoting well-being. We test whether social support changes around retirement. We also examine whether social support moderates dynamics in mental well-being around retirement and consider both own and spouse's retirement drawing on a unique longitudinal, couple-level data set from Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2021
Economics Subject, Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom.
Several studies have been devoted to establishing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health across gender, age, and ethnicity. However, much less attention has been paid to the differential effect of COVID-19 according to different personalities. We do this using the UK Household Longitudinal Study (UKHLS), a large-scale panel survey representative of the UK population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Alcohol Depend
October 2021
Faculty of Management and Business, FI-30014 Tampere University, Tampere, Finland. Electronic address:
Background: The secular decline in labor market participation and the concurrent increase in opioid use in many developed countries have sparked a policy debate on the possible connection between these two trends. We examined whether the use of prescription opioids was connected to labor market outcomes relating to participation, employment and unemployment among the Finnish population.
Methods: The working-age population (aged 19-64 years) living in Finland during the period 1995-2016 was used in the analyses (consisting of 67 903 701 person-year observations).
Health Econ
November 2021
Department of Economics, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
We rank counties in the United States with respect to population health. We utilize the five observable county health variables used to construct the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute's County Health Rankings (CHRs). Our method relies on a Bayesian factor analysis model that estimates data-driven weights for our rankings, incorporates county population sizes into the level of rank uncertainty, and allows for spillovers of health stock across county lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcon Inq
January 2021
Pediatrics and Public Health, Rutgers University, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ 08903.
This study investigates effects of welfare reform in the United States on the next generation. Most previous studies of effects of welfare reform on adolescents focused on high-school dropout of girls or fertility; little is known about how welfare reform has affected other teenage behaviors or boys. We use a difference-in-difference-in-differences framework to identify gender-specific effects of welfare reform on skipping school, fighting, damaging property, stealing, hurting others, smoking, alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dev Stud
June 2021
Department of Economics and Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin. Indian Statistical Institute, Delhi Centre. IZA Institute of Labor Economics. Institute for Futures Studies (IFFS), Stockholm.
What are the prospects for using population policy as tool to reduce carbon emissions? In this paper, we review evidence from population science, in order to inform debates in population ethics that, so far, have largely taken place within the academic philosophy literature. In particular, we ask whether fertility policy is likely to have a large effect on carbon emissions, and therefore on temperature change. Our answer is no.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
September 2021
Department of Psychology, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany.
Understanding the neural correlates of risk-sensitive skin conductance responses can provide insights into their connection to emotional and cognitive processes. To provide insights into this connection, we studied the cortical correlates of risk-sensitive skin conductance peaks using electroencephalography. Fluctuations in skin conductance responses were elicited while participants played a threat-of-shock card game.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Econ
September 2021
Department of Economics, University of Verona, Via Cantarane 24, Verona 37129, Italy; Department of Technology, Management and Economics, Technical University of Denmark, Produktionstorvet 424, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark. Electronic address:
This paper provides novel evidence of the unintended health effects stemming from the halt in nuclear power production after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident. After the accident, nuclear power stations ceased operation and nuclear power was replaced by fossil fuels, causing an increase in electricity prices. We find that this increase led to a reduction in energy consumption, which caused an increase in mortality during very cold temperatures, given the protective role that climate control plays against the elements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Public Health
October 2021
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Background: Health status is a principal determinant of labour market participation. In this study, we examined whether excess weight is associated with withdrawal from the labour market owing to premature retirement.
Methods: The analyses were based on nationally representative data from Finland over the period 2001-15 (N ∼ 2500).
J Health Econ
September 2021
University of Exeter Business School, Exeter, United Kingdom; IZA (Institute of Labor Economics), Bonn, Germany.
We provide the first quasi-experimental evidence on the relationship between cigarette taxes and smoking among sexual minority adults, a group that has been understudied in past research. We use large samples of individuals in same-sex households (a large share of whom are sexual minorities in same-sex romantic relationships) from the 1996-2018 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. We find that cigarette taxes significantly reduced smoking among men and women in same-sex households, and the effects we find for men in same-sex households are very robust and significantly larger than the associated effects for men in different-sex households (the vast majority of whom are heterosexual married or partnered men).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
May 2021
Division of Insurance Medicine, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
: A unified or consensus definition of "sustainable working life" remains lacking, although studies investigating risk factors for labour market exit are numerous. In this study, we aimed (1) to update the information and to explore a definition of "sustainable working life" via a systematic literature review and (2) to describe the working life trajectories via the prevalence of sickness absence (SA), disability pension (DP), and unemployment in a Swedish twin cohort to provide a sample overview in our Sustainable Working Life-project. : A systematic literature review was conducted to explore the studies with the search phrase "sustainable working life" in PubMed, PsycInfo, and the Web of Science Database of Social Sciences in January 2021, resulting in a total of 51 references.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcon Hum Biol
August 2021
University of Perugia, Italy. Electronic address:
The lockdown imposed during the spring of 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic upset families lives, in addition to the health consequences of the virus, forcing parents to completely reorganize their labor, domestic work and childcare time. At the same time, school closures forced children to rearrange their lives and learning processes: in Italy, schools and nurseries were closed for four months, and the incidence and quality of distance learning activities was heterogeneous across education levels and among schools. Using real-time survey data on families with under-16 children collected in April 2020, which include information on parents' market and household work, and their perception of their children's wellbeing, we estimate how the lockdown has affected children's use of time, their emotional status and their home learning, and whether the reallocation of intrahousehold responsibilities during the lockdown played a role in this process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
November 2021
Department of Economics and Olin School of Business, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America.
Individual life expectancies provide information for individuals making retirement decisions and for policy makers. For couples, analogous measures are the expected years both spouses will be alive (joint life expectancy) and the expected years the surviving spouse will be a widow or widower (survivor life expectancy). Using individual life expectancies to calculate summary measures for couples is intuitively appealing but yield misleading results, overstating joint life expectancy and dramatically understating survivor life expectancies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPopul Health Metr
May 2021
Global Health Institute, School of Public Health, Xi'an Jiaotong University Health Science Center, Xi'an, 710061, Shaanxi, China.
Background: Although understanding changes in the body weight distribution and trends in obesity inequality plays a key role in assessing the causes and persistence of obesity, limited research on this topic is available for Cuba. This study thus analyzed changes in body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) distributions and obesity inequality over a 9-year period among urban Cuban adults.
Methods: Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests were first applied to the data from the 2001 and 2010 National Survey on Risk Factors and Chronic Diseases to identify a rightward shift in both the BMI and WC distributions over the 2001-2010 period.
Economist (Leiden)
April 2021
Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic & Social Research, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
We explore the impact of COVID-19 hotspots and regional lockdowns on the Dutch labour market during the outbreak of COVID-19. Using weekly administrative panel microdata for 50 per cent of Dutch employees until the end of March 2020, we study whether individual labour market outcomes, as measured by employment, working hours and hourly wages, were more strongly affected in provinces where COVID-19 confirmed cases, hospitalizations and mortality were relatively high. The evidence suggests that labour market outcomes were negatively affected in all regions and local higher virus case numbers did not reinforce this decline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Econ
July 2021
Department of Economics, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Understanding the relationship between disability and employment is critical and has long been the subject of study. However, estimating this relationship is difficult, particularly with survey data, since both disability and employment status are known to be misreported. Here, we use a partial identification approach to bound the joint distribution of disability and employment status in the presence of misclassification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatl Tax J
June 2020
Center for Health Economics and Policy Studies, Department of Economics, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA, and Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn, Germany.
The spillover effect of cigarette taxes on youth marijuana use has been the subject of intense public debate. Opponents of cigarette taxes warn that tax hikes will cause youths to substitute toward marijuana. On the other hand, public health experts often claim that because tobacco is a "gateway" drug, higher cigarette taxes will deter youth marijuana use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Econ Manage
July 2021
Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), Germany.
We study the impact of short-term exposure to ambient air pollution on the spread and severity of COVID-19 in Germany. We combine data at the county-by-day level on confirmed cases and deaths with information on local air quality and weather conditions. Following Deryugina et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDemography
April 2021
School of Social Science, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Although numerous studies have examined how children raised in same-sex-parented families fare relative to children in different-sex-parented families, this body of work suffers from major methodological shortcomings. By leveraging linked administrative data from several population registers from the Netherlands covering the 2006-2018 period (n = 1,454,577), we overcome most methodological limitations affecting earlier research. The unique features of the data include complete population coverage, reliable identification of same-sex-parented families, a large number of children in same-sex-parented families (n = 3,006), multiple objective and verifiable educational outcomes, and detailed measures of family dynamics over children's entire life courses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
April 2021
Department of Microeconomics and Public Economics, Maastricht University, 6200 MD, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Situations where independent agents need to align their activities to achieve individually and socially beneficial outcomes are abundant, reaching from everyday situations like fixing a time for a meeting to global problems like climate change agreements. Often such situations can be described as stag-hunt games, where coordinating on the socially efficient outcome is individually optimal but also entails a risk of losing out. Previous work has shown that in fixed interaction neighborhoods agents' behavior mostly converges to the collectively inefficient outcome.
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