School of Social Work, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.
Brookings Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.
Health Econ. 2023 Dec;32(12):2694-2708. doi: 10.1002/hec.4747. Epub 2023 Aug 1.
A growing body of evidence indicates that poor health early in life can leave lasting scars on adult health and economic outcomes. While much of this literature focuses on childhood experiences, mechanisms generating these lasting effects-recurrence of illness and interruption of human capital accumulation-are not limited to childhood. In this study, we examine how an episode of depression experienced in early adulthood affects subsequent labor market outcomes. We find that, at age 50, people who had met diagnostic criteria for depression when surveyed at ages 27-35 earn 10% lower hourly wages (conditional on occupation), work 120-180 fewer hours annually, and earn 24% lower annual wage incomes. A portion of this income penalty (21%-39%) occurs because depression is often a chronic condition, recurring later in life. But a substantial share (25%-55%) occurs because depression in early adulthood disrupts human capital accumulation, by reducing work experience and by influencing selection into occupations with skill distributions that offer lower potential for wage growth. These lingering effects of early depression reinforce the importance of early and multifaceted intervention to address depression and its follow-on effects in the workplace.
越来越多的证据表明,生命早期的健康状况不佳会给成年后的健康和经济状况留下持久的影响。尽管这方面的文献主要集中在儿童时期的经历上,但产生这些持久影响的机制——疾病复发和人力资本积累中断——并不局限于儿童时期。在这项研究中,我们研究了一个人在成年早期经历的抑郁发作如何影响后续的劳动力市场结果。我们发现,在 50 岁时,那些在 27-35 岁时接受调查时符合抑郁诊断标准的人,每小时的工资要低 10%(按职业划分),每年工作的小时数要少 120-180 小时,年收入要低 24%。由于抑郁通常是一种慢性疾病,会在以后的生活中复发,因此这种收入惩罚的一部分(21%-39%)是由其引起的。但相当一部分(25%-55%)是由于成年早期的抑郁会干扰人力资本的积累,从而减少工作经验,并影响到选择那些技能分布提供较低工资增长潜力的职业。早期抑郁的这些挥之不去的影响,强化了早期采取多方面措施来解决抑郁问题及其在工作场所后续影响的重要性。