Dee T S
Department of Economics, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, USA.
Health Econ. 2001 Apr;10(3):257-70. doi: 10.1002/hec.588.
This study presents novel evidence on the relationship between macroeconomic conditions and patterns of alcohol consumption. Prior research has suggested that alcohol abuse varies procyclically, implying that income effects dominate any drinking patterns related to the opportunity cost of time or the psychological stress of recessions. However, those inferences have been based either on aggregate measures of consumption volume or possibly confounded cross-sectional identification strategies. This study examines these issues by evaluating detailed consumption data from the more than 700 000 respondents who participated in the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) surveys over the 1984-1995 period. The results provide robust evidence that the prevalence of binge drinking is strongly countercyclical. Furthermore, even among those who remain employed, binge drinking increased substantially during economic downturns. This combination of results suggests that recession-induced increases in the prevalence of binge drinking do not simply reflect an increased availability of leisure and may instead reflect the influence of economic stress.
本研究提供了关于宏观经济状况与酒精消费模式之间关系的新证据。先前的研究表明,酒精滥用呈顺周期变化,这意味着收入效应在任何与时间机会成本或衰退心理压力相关的饮酒模式中占主导地位。然而,这些推断要么基于消费量的总体衡量指标,要么可能受到混淆的横截面识别策略的影响。本研究通过评估1984 - 1995年期间参与疾病控制和预防中心行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS)调查的70多万受访者的详细消费数据来研究这些问题。结果提供了有力证据,表明暴饮的患病率呈强烈的反周期变化。此外,即使在那些仍有工作的人中,经济衰退期间暴饮现象也大幅增加。这些结果综合起来表明,经济衰退导致的暴饮患病率上升并非仅仅反映休闲时间的增加,而可能反映了经济压力的影响。