Wealth and health behavior: testing the concept of a health cost

Publication type

Journal Article

Authors

Publication date

November 15, 2014

Summary:

Wealthier individuals engage in healthier behavior. This paper seeks to explain this phenomenon by exploiting both inheritances and lottery winnings to test a theory of health behavior. We distinguish between the direct monetary cost and the indirect health cost (value of health lost) of unhealthy consumption. The health cost increases with wealth and the degree of unhealthiness, leading wealthier individuals to consume more healthy and moderately unhealthy, but fewer severely unhealthy goods. The empirical evidence presented suggests that differences in health costs may indeed partially explain behavioral differences, and ultimately health outcomes, between wealth groups.

Published in

European Economic Review

Volume and page numbers

Volume: 72 , p.197 -220

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2014.10.003

ISSN

142921

Subjects

Notes

Albert Sloman Library Periodicals *restricted to Univ. Essex registered users*

#523296

News

Latest findings, new research

Publications search

Search all research by subject and author

Podcasts

Researchers discuss their findings and what they mean for society

Projects

Background and context, methods and data, aims and outputs

Events

Conferences, seminars and workshops

Survey methodology

Specialist research, practice and study

Taking the long view

ISER's annual report

Themes

Key research themes and areas of interest