University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health, Division of Health Policy and Management, 2121 Berkeley Way, Room 5302, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States.
Econ Hum Biol. 2024 Apr;53:101374. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2024.101374. Epub 2024 Mar 13.
This study presents new evidence of the effects of short-term economic fluctuations on suicide, fatal drug overdose, and alcohol-related mortality among working-age adults in the United States from 2003-2017. Using a shift-share instrumental variables approach, I find that a one percentage point increase in the aggregate employment rate decreases current-year non-drug suicides by 1.7 percent. These protective effects are concentrated among working-age men and likely reflect a combination of individual labor market experiences as well as the indirect effects of local economic growth. I find no consistent evidence that short-term business cycle changes affect drug or alcohol-related mortality. While the estimated protective effects are small relative to secular increases in suicide in recent decades, these findings are suggestive of important, short-term economic factors affecting specific causes of death and should be considered alongside the longer-term and multifaceted social, economic, and cultural determinants of America's "despair" epidemic.
本研究提供了新的证据,表明美国 2003-2017 年期间短期经济波动对工作年龄成年人的自杀、致命药物过量和与酒精相关的死亡率的影响。本文使用转移份额工具变量方法发现,总就业率增加一个百分点,当年非药物自杀率降低 1.7%。这些保护作用主要集中在工作年龄的男性中,可能反映了个人劳动力市场经验的综合影响,以及当地经济增长的间接影响。本文没有发现短期商业周期变化会影响药物或酒精相关死亡率的一致证据。虽然与最近几十年自杀率的长期上升相比,估计的保护作用较小,但这些发现表明短期经济因素对特定死因有重要影响,应该与美国“绝望”流行的更长期、多方面的社会、经济和文化决定因素一起考虑。