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Author: Dench, Daniel
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Dench, Daniel
Grossman, Michael
Health and the Wage: Cause, Effect, Both, or Neither? New Evidence on an Old Question
NBER Working Paper No. 25264, National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2018.
Also: https://www.nber.org/papers/w25264
Cohort(s): NLSY97
Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
Keyword(s): Career Patterns; Health/Health Status/SF-12 Scale; Wage Differentials; Wage Rates

We investigate two-way causality between health and the hourly wage by employing insights from the human capital and compensating wage differential models, a panel formed from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, and dynamic panel estimation methods in this investigation. We uncover a causal relationship between two of five measures of health and the wage in which a reduction in health leads to an increase in the wage rate but find no evidence of a causal relationship running from the wage rate to health. The former result is consistent with a framework in which a large amount of effort in one period is required to obtain promotions and the wage increases that accompany them in subsequent periods. That effort may cause reductions in health and result in a negative effect of health in the previous period on the current period wage. The finding also is consistent with a model in which investments in career advancement compete with investments in health for time--the ultimate scarce resource. The lack of a causal effect of the wage on health may suggest that forces that go in opposite directions in the human capital and compensating wage differential models offset each other.
Bibliography Citation
Dench, Daniel and Michael Grossman. "Health and the Wage: Cause, Effect, Both, or Neither? New Evidence on an Old Question." NBER Working Paper No. 25264, National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2018.