4.3 Article

The Causal Effect of Education on Health: What is the Role of Health Behaviors?

Journal

HEALTH ECONOMICS
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 314-336

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hec.3141

Keywords

SHARE; health; education; health behaviors

Funding

  1. Fondazione Cariparo
  2. MIUR-FIRB project [RBFR089QQC-003-J31J10000060001]
  3. Austrian Science Funds ('The Austrian Center for Labor Economics and the Analysis of the Welfare State')
  4. European Commission
  5. US National Institute on Aging

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We investigate the causal effect of education on health and the part of it that is attributable to health behaviors by distinguishing between short-run and long-run mediating effects: whereas, in the former, only behaviors in the immediate past are taken into account, in the latter, we consider the entire history of behaviors. We use two identification strategies: instrumental variables based on compulsory schooling reforms and a combined aggregation, differencing, and selection on an observables technique to address the endogeneity of both education and behaviors in the health production function. Using panel data for European countries, we find that education has a protective effect for European men and women aged 50+. We find that the mediating effects of health behaviorsmeasured by smoking, drinking, exercising, and the body mass indexaccount in the short run for around a quarter and in the long run for around a third of the entire effect of education on health. Copyright (c) 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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