Frech Adrianne, Damaske Sarah
University of Missouri.
The Pennsylvania State University.
AJS. 2019 Mar;124(5):1372-1412. doi: 10.1086/702775.
Using time-varying, prospectively measured income in a nationally representative sample of Baby-Boomer men (the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth - 1979 [NLSY79]), we identify eight group-based trajectories of income between ages 25-49 and use multinomial treatment models to describe the associations between group-based income trajectories and mental and physical health at midlife. We find remarkable rigidity in income trajectories: less than 25% of our sample experiences significant upward or downward mobility between the ages of 25 to 49 and most who move remain or move into poverty. Men's physical and mental health at age fifty is strongly associated with their income trajectories, and some upwardly mobile men achieve the same physical and mental health as the highest earning men after adjusting for selection. The worse physical and mental health of men on other income trajectories is largely attributable to their early life disadvantages, health behaviors, and cumulative work experiences.
在“婴儿潮一代”男性的全国代表性样本(1979年全国青年纵向调查 [NLSY79])中,我们使用随时间变化的前瞻性测量收入,确定了25至49岁之间基于群体的八种收入轨迹,并使用多项处理模型来描述基于群体的收入轨迹与中年时身心健康之间的关联。我们发现收入轨迹具有显著的刚性:在我们的样本中,不到25% 的人在25至49岁之间经历了显著的向上或向下流动,而且大多数流动的人仍然处于贫困或陷入贫困。五十岁男性的身心健康与他们的收入轨迹密切相关,一些向上流动的男性在调整选择因素后,身心健康状况与收入最高的男性相同。处于其他收入轨迹的男性身心健康较差,这在很大程度上归因于他们早年的劣势、健康行为和累积的工作经历。