Does rising income inequality affect mortality rates in advanced economies?
Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)
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Title |
Does rising income inequality affect mortality rates in advanced economies?
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Identifier |
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/E3X2NO
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Creator |
Rebeira, Mayvis
Grootendorst, Paul Coyte, Peter C. Aguirregabiria, Victor |
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Publisher |
Harvard Dataverse
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Description |
What effect does rising income inequality have on longevity in advanced developed economies? This paper focuses on the effect of income inequality on mortality rates for men and women in a subset of OECD countries over nearly six decades from 1950-2008. Using adult mortality rates at aged sixty-five as the outcome measure of mortality, the latest available data on inverted Pareto-Lorenz coefficient as a measure of income inequality, we conduct a range of analysis to investigate the relationship. The findings show that income inequality has a negative effect on mortality rates for both men and women, that is, an increase in income inequality at the top of the distribution does not appear to have a detrimental effect on adult mortality rates in the population of advanced developed countries. For every one unit increase in income inequality, female mortality rates decreased by 0.024 percentage points (p≤0.001) and male mortality rates decreased by 0.052 percentage points (p≤0.001). Dynamic OLS results show that for every one unit increase in income inequality, female mortality rates decreased by 0.032 percentage points (p≤0.01) and male mortality rates decreased by 0.067 percentage points (p≤0.001). The findings remain robust to changes in methodology and the inclusion of control variables including GDP, population and the health capital index.
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Subject |
Social Sciences
Income inequality mortality health inverted Pareto- Lorenz dynamic OLS |
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Language |
English
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Contributor |
Werner-Schwarz, Korinna
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