Center for Demography of Health and Aging, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1180 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Sociology, Center for Demography of Health and Aging, and Center for Demography and Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
J Health Econ. 2022 Dec;86:102690. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2022.102690. Epub 2022 Oct 1.
A growing body of research explores the long-run effects of social programs and welfare spending. However, evidence linking welfare support in early life with longevity is limited. We add to this literature by evaluating the effect of in-utero and early-life exposure to the largest increases in welfare spending in the US history under the New Deal programs. Using Social Security Administration death records linked with the 1940-census and spending data for 115 major cities, we show that the spending is correlated with improvements in old-age longevity. A treatment-on-treated calculation focused on a period when spending rose by approximately 1900 percent finds that a 100 percent rise in municipal spending in the year of birth is associated with roughly 3.5 months higher longevity. We show that these effects are not driven by endogenous selection of births, selective fertility, endogenous migration, and sample selection caused by endogenous data linking. Additional analysis suggests that rises in education and socioeconomic status are likely channels of impact.
越来越多的研究探讨了社会项目和福利支出的长期影响。然而,将早期生活中的福利支持与长寿联系起来的证据有限。我们通过评估在美国新政计划下,一生中早期暴露于美国历史上最大的福利支出增加的影响,为这一文献做出了贡献。利用社会保障管理局的死亡记录与 1940 年人口普查以及 115 个主要城市的支出数据相关联,我们表明,支出与老年长寿的改善相关。一项针对支出增长约 1900%的时期的治疗性治疗计算表明,出生年份市政支出增长 100%与寿命延长约 3.5 个月有关。我们表明,这些影响不是由出生的内生选择、选择性生育、内生迁移以及由于内生数据关联导致的样本选择驱动的。进一步的分析表明,教育和社会经济地位的提高可能是影响的渠道。