Feeling Useless: The Effect of Unemployment on Mental Health in the Great Recession
65 Pages Posted: 6 Aug 2018
Date Written: August 2018
Abstract
This article documents a strong connection between unemployment and mental distress using data from the Spanish National Health Survey. We exploit the collapse of the construction sector to identify the causal effect of job losses in different segments of the Spanish labour market. Our results suggest that an increase of the unemployment rate by 10 percentage points due to the breakdown in construction raised reported poor health and mental disorders in the affected population by 3 percentage points, respectively. We argue that the size of this effect responds to the fact that the construction sector was at the centre of the economic recession. As a result, workers exposed to the negative labor demand shock faced very low chances of re-entering employment. We show that this led to long unemployment spells, stress, hopelessness and feelings of uselessness. These effects point towards a potential channel for unemployment hysteresis.
Keywords: great recession, hysteresis, mental health, unemployment
JEL Classification: C26, I10, J60
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation