Economic Fluctuations Affect High blood Pressure and Heart
Problems, but not Arthritis, Diabetes, Lung diseases and Cancer
Do wealth shocks affect the health of the elderly in
developed countries? The economic literature is skeptical about such effects
which have so far only been found for poor retirees in poor countries. In this
paper I show that wealth shocks also matter for the health of wealthy retirees
in the US. I exploit the booms and busts in the US stock market as a natural
experiment that generated considerable gains and losses in the wealth of
stockholding retirees. Using data from the Health and Retirement Study I construct
wealth shocks as the interaction of stock holdings with stock market changes.
These constructed wealth shocks are highly predictive of changes in reported
wealth. And they strongly affect health outcomes. A 10% wealth shock leads to
an improvement of 2-3% of a standard deviation in physical health, mental
health and survival rates. Effects are heterogeneous across physical health
conditions, with most pronounced effects for the incidence of high blood
pressure, smaller effects for heart problems and no effects for arthritis,
diabetes, lung diseases and cancer. The comparison with the cross sectional
relationship of wealth and health suggests that the estimated effects of wealth
shocks are larger than the long-run wealth elasticity of health.
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