The contribution of occupation to health inequality.

Bastian Ravesteijn, Hans van Kippersluis, Eddy van Doorslaer
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Abstract

Health is distributed unequally by occupation. Workers on a lower rung of the occupational ladder report worse health, have a higher probability of disability and die earlier than workers higher up the occupational hierarchy. Using a theoretical framework that unveils some of the potential mechanisms underlying these disparities, three core insights emerge: (i) there is selection into occupation on the basis of initial wealth, education, and health, (ii) there will be behavioural responses to adverse working conditions, which can have compensating or reinforcing effects on health, and (iii) workplace conditions increase health inequalities if workers with initially low socioeconomic status choose harmful occupations and don't offset detrimental health effects. We provide empirical illustrations of these insights using data for the Netherlands and assess the evidence available in the economics literature.

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职业对健康不平等的影响。
健康因职业而分布不均。与职业等级较高的工人相比,职业等级较低的工人健康状况较差,残疾概率较高,死亡时间较早。我们利用理论框架揭示了造成这些差异的一些潜在机制,并提出了三个核心观点:(i) 职业选择基于初始财富、教育和健康状况;(ii) 对不利的工作条件会有行为反应,这可能会对健康产生补偿或强化作用;(iii) 如果社会经济地位最初较低的工人选择了有害的职业,而没有抵消对健康的不利影响,那么工作场所的条件就会加剧健康不平等。我们利用荷兰的数据对这些观点进行了实证说明,并对经济学文献中的证据进行了评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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