Absolute versus Relative Income and Their Effect on Depression and Chronic Anxiety

Q4 Economics, Econometrics and Finance Applied Economics Quarterly Pub Date : 2017-12-01 DOI:10.3790/AEQ.63.4.429
Orly Zelekha, Yaron Zelekha
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Abstract

We use a large survey on health conditions conducted in Israel to explore whether absolute and/or relative income has a moderating effect on depression and/or chronic anxiety. In contributing to the literature, we use diagnosis-based depression and/or anxiety instead of non-diagnosis terms, such as happiness or well-being. Under this framework, we found that all of the moderating effect of income should be attributed to relative income and especially to socioeconomic relative income. Thus, stressing social comparison, as opposed to inner comparison or habituation. These moderating effects, which are mostly found in middle-aged adults (ages 30 to 65), are robust to alternative specifications of different sampling of health conditions, numerous control variables and several subsamples divided by gender, age and religion. The results have important health policy implications regarding possible treatments.
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绝对收入与相对收入及其对抑郁和慢性焦虑的影响
我们对以色列的健康状况进行了一项大型调查,以探讨绝对和/或相对收入是否对抑郁症和/或慢性焦虑有调节作用。在对文献的贡献中,我们使用了基于诊断的抑郁和/或焦虑,而不是非诊断术语,如幸福或幸福。在这个框架下,我们发现收入的所有调节作用都应该归因于相对收入,尤其是社会经济相对收入。因此,强调社会比较,而不是内心比较或习惯化。这些调节作用主要发生在中年人(30至65岁)身上,对不同健康状况样本、众多控制变量和按性别、年龄和宗教划分的几个子样本的替代规范来说是强有力的。研究结果对可能的治疗方法具有重要的卫生政策意义。
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来源期刊
Applied Economics Quarterly
Applied Economics Quarterly Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (all)
CiteScore
0.50
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0.00%
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