Economic Disparities, Life Events, and the Gender Mental Health Gap
In: Social indicators research: an international and interdisciplinary journal for quality-of-life measurement, Volume 174, Issue 3, p. 1053-1100
Abstract
AbstractThis paper studies factors explaining the gender mental health gap using Australian data. We show that men have significantly higher mean outcomes and the left tail of the combined distribution is disproportionately female. Using regression-based decompositions, we examine the degree that both socioeconomic inequalities and life experience account for this phenomenon. We find that disparities in income play a substantial role, and subject to an assumption of exogeneity, would be enough to account for the gender gap amongst individuals with very poor psychological wellbeing. We also examine the mental health effects of various negative life experience, such as the death of a family member or being a victim of violence. At the individual level, these variables have large effect sizes but are not strongly correlated with gender to explain our mental health disparities.
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Languages
English
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN: 1573-0921
DOI
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