Publication type
Journal Article
Series Number
Authors
Publication date
June 1, 2026
Summary:
We address an important research gap by quantifying the association between weather conditions (sunshine, rainfall, temperature anomalies) and individualnancial, mental and physical health self-assessments. We compile a unique dataset of >400,000 observations (1991-2018) by matching individual-level data (covering 380 Local Authorities) from the British Household Panel & UK Household Longitudinal Surveys to monthly and daily data from 32 weather stations. We provide robust evidence that favourable climatic conditions are positively related to the likelihood of reporting higher wellbeing assessments, and negatively regarding adverse conditions (particularly temperature anomalies). The estimated weather monetary cost reaches 15 percent of monthly household income.
Published in
Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics
ISSN
03059049
Subjects
Link
Notes
Forthcoming
Accepted for publication - 10 Dec 2025
#588898