Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts

This paper examines the relationship between unemployment and psychological well-being before and during the Great Recession across 249 UK local authority districts (LADs). Substantial evidence demonstrates that unemployment has a large negative effect on psychological well-being. However, unique so...

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Main Authors: Kevin Mulligan, Marta Zieba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Regional Studies, Regional Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2020.1784779
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spelling doaj-104b484dccf84ae8841bf890cb2e0fe82021-01-04T18:22:10ZengTaylor & Francis GroupRegional Studies, Regional Science2168-13762020-01-017126728710.1080/21681376.2020.17847791784779Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districtsKevin Mulligan0Marta Zieba1Department of Economics, University of LimerickDepartment of Economics, University of LimerickThis paper examines the relationship between unemployment and psychological well-being before and during the Great Recession across 249 UK local authority districts (LADs). Substantial evidence demonstrates that unemployment has a large negative effect on psychological well-being. However, unique social norms develop in geographical areas with high unemployment rates, which significantly reduce the negative impact of unemployment on well-being. Though the post-2007 Great Recession period was characterized by widespread unemployment, few studies have examined the impact of this crisis on well-being in high- and low-unemployment local areas. The analysis constructs a rich panel data set which follows 15,798 individuals from 1998 to 2014, and applies difference-in-differences fixed-effects and general method of moments estimators. The findings indicate that unemployment had a large negative impact on psychological well-being. However, the magnitude of this effect did not change (or was even slightly lower) during the Great Recession. Furthermore, the unemployment social norm also ceased to have any additional effect on well-being during the Great Recession in high-unemployment LADs, as opposed to the pre-recession period.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2020.1784779unemploymentpsychological well-beinggreat recessionsocial normuk local authority districtspanel data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kevin Mulligan
Marta Zieba
spellingShingle Kevin Mulligan
Marta Zieba
Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
Regional Studies, Regional Science
unemployment
psychological well-being
great recession
social norm
uk local authority districts
panel data
author_facet Kevin Mulligan
Marta Zieba
author_sort Kevin Mulligan
title Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
title_short Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
title_full Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
title_fullStr Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
title_full_unstemmed Well-being and unemployment during the Great Recession: an empirical analysis across UK local authority districts
title_sort well-being and unemployment during the great recession: an empirical analysis across uk local authority districts
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Regional Studies, Regional Science
issn 2168-1376
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This paper examines the relationship between unemployment and psychological well-being before and during the Great Recession across 249 UK local authority districts (LADs). Substantial evidence demonstrates that unemployment has a large negative effect on psychological well-being. However, unique social norms develop in geographical areas with high unemployment rates, which significantly reduce the negative impact of unemployment on well-being. Though the post-2007 Great Recession period was characterized by widespread unemployment, few studies have examined the impact of this crisis on well-being in high- and low-unemployment local areas. The analysis constructs a rich panel data set which follows 15,798 individuals from 1998 to 2014, and applies difference-in-differences fixed-effects and general method of moments estimators. The findings indicate that unemployment had a large negative impact on psychological well-being. However, the magnitude of this effect did not change (or was even slightly lower) during the Great Recession. Furthermore, the unemployment social norm also ceased to have any additional effect on well-being during the Great Recession in high-unemployment LADs, as opposed to the pre-recession period.
topic unemployment
psychological well-being
great recession
social norm
uk local authority districts
panel data
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2020.1784779
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