Publication type
Research Paper
Series
SSRN Research Paper Series
Author
Publication date
May 15, 2016
Summary:
UK households have been exposed to economic recession followed by a government programme of austerity putting many under severe financial strain. Using a large UK survey, we find that the feeling of not being able to cope financially matters for individual mental and physical health even when controlling for individual heterogeneity and potential reverse causation. We develop a theoretical model which brings some of the rigour of lifetime economic decision-making models to bear on our understanding of the causes of financial strain. Our estimation results for this model highlight that shocks to how we view our financial situation are more important for subjective financial wellbeing than not having enough income or being liquidity constrained. Recent welfare and pension reforms intended to reduce budget deficits may have exacerbated financial strain and thus increased public healthcare costs. In the case of disability benefits reform, we find that the uncertainty generated by an opaque process of reassessment caused financial strain to increase even when households were not materially worse off.
Subjects
Link
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2872043
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