Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
June 30, 2020
Summary:
We document a decline in mental well-being after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in the UK. This decline is more than twice as large for women as for men. We seek to explain this gender gap by exploring gender differences in: family and caring responsibilities; financial and work situation; social engagement; health situation, and health behaviours, including exercise. We discuss two dimensions of gender differences, the extent to which particular circumstances relate to well-being and the share of individuals facing a given circumstance. Overall, we find that differences in family and caring responsibilities can explain a part of the gender gap, but the bulk is explained by social factors such as loneliness. Other factors such as financial difficulties or age are similarly distributed across genders and thus play little role in explaining the gap.
Published in
Covid Economics
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 33 , p.46 -72
Subjects
Links
- https://cepr.org/content/covid-economics-vetted-and-real-time-papers-0
- https://cepr.org/content/covid-economics-vetted-and-real-time-papers-0
- https://cepr.org/file/9256/download?token=DHbO0cn_
Related Publications
-
The gender gap in mental well-being at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic: evidence from the UK
Ben Etheridge, Lisa Spantig,Journal Article - 20220615
-
The gender gap in mental well-being during the Covid-19 outbreak: evidence from the UK
Ben Etheridge, Lisa Spantig,ISER Working Paper Series - 20200608
#526485