Health, Income, and Risk Aversion: Assessing Some Welfare Costs of Alcoholism and Poor Health

34 Pages Posted: 27 Dec 2000 Last revised: 16 Sep 2022

See all articles by John Mullahy

John Mullahy

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Population Health Sciences; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Jody L. Sindelar

Yale University - School of Public Health

Date Written: February 1994

Abstract

The economic costs of adverse health outcomes have typically been evaluated in a context of risk neutrality, an approach that ignores the potential welfare importance of individuals' risk preferences. This paper presents a framework that unifies the research in health capital and earnings with that on risk preferences in the presence of stochastic outcomes. The model is implemented to obtain estimates of the economic damages due both to general health problems as well as to one specific health problem that is of considerable interest from society's perspective: alcoholism. Our empirical findings, based on data from the Epidemiologic Catchment Area survey, indicate that failure to recognize the possibility of risk averse preferences leads to a potentially serious underestimation of the magnitudes of the 'costs' of alcoholism and poor health. In particular, it is shown that while alcoholism problems have negative impacts on the conditional mean of income (consistent with most of the existing literature), they also have positive impacts on the conditional variance of income. Our conclusions are to some degree provisional because our estimates of conditional variances are necessarily biased to the extent that unobserved heterogeneity is an important determinant of the moment structure of income in our sample.

Suggested Citation

Mullahy, John and Sindelar, Jody L., Health, Income, and Risk Aversion: Assessing Some Welfare Costs of Alcoholism and Poor Health (February 1994). NBER Working Paper No. w4649, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=254535

John Mullahy (Contact Author)

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Population Health Sciences ( email )

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Jody L. Sindelar

Yale University - School of Public Health ( email )

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