Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case

Seminario para optar al título de Ingeniero Comercial, Mención Economía === Medical conditions can be very detrimental for individual’s development of their daily activities, specially when they influence people´s mood states, deterring them from accomplishing their labor goals or the things they wo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo
Other Authors: Stein Bronfman, Roberto
Language:en
Published: Universidad de Chile 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/108024
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spelling ndltd-UCHILE-oai-repositorio.uchile.cl-2250-1080242018-04-05T05:06:32Z Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo Stein Bronfman, Roberto Facultad de Economía y Negocios Escuela de Economía y Administración Psicología del trabajo Mercado de trabajo Seminario para optar al título de Ingeniero Comercial, Mención Economía Medical conditions can be very detrimental for individual’s development of their daily activities, specially when they influence people´s mood states, deterring them from accomplishing their labor goals or the things they would like to do just for fun, in a healthier context. Through this working paper we hope to deliver a useful parsimonious approach aimed to disentangle the impact of having ever suffered from clinical depression in relevant labor market outcomes, such as employment and income from labor. For our salary variable we built a classic OLS model and found that depression accounts for a 18% reduction in income in comparison to healthy people (people without a depression diagnosis in the past). For our second approach, we formulated a probit and a logit model by regressing our unemployment binary variable (that takes the value 1 for individuals prone to be unemployed) against our depression indicator. Our findings suggested a slight 1.8% increasing in the likelihood of being unemployed for people who was ever diagnosed with depression. With these findings we hope to give some support for policy makers to include in their agendas, as a top medical priority, depressive conditions. A final contribution of our findings would be the much greater identified tendency to suffer from depression for females, which naturally would demand differentiated treating between both genders when it comes to policy makers for addressing their efforts to minimize the social cost of this disease, given that public resources are scant (specially for emerging economies) and must therefore be focused on the ones that require them the most. 2012-09-12T18:47:32Z 2012-09-12T18:47:32Z 2011 Tesis http://www.repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/108024 en Universidad de Chile
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Psicología del trabajo
Mercado de trabajo
spellingShingle Psicología del trabajo
Mercado de trabajo
Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo
Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
description Seminario para optar al título de Ingeniero Comercial, Mención Economía === Medical conditions can be very detrimental for individual’s development of their daily activities, specially when they influence people´s mood states, deterring them from accomplishing their labor goals or the things they would like to do just for fun, in a healthier context. Through this working paper we hope to deliver a useful parsimonious approach aimed to disentangle the impact of having ever suffered from clinical depression in relevant labor market outcomes, such as employment and income from labor. For our salary variable we built a classic OLS model and found that depression accounts for a 18% reduction in income in comparison to healthy people (people without a depression diagnosis in the past). For our second approach, we formulated a probit and a logit model by regressing our unemployment binary variable (that takes the value 1 for individuals prone to be unemployed) against our depression indicator. Our findings suggested a slight 1.8% increasing in the likelihood of being unemployed for people who was ever diagnosed with depression. With these findings we hope to give some support for policy makers to include in their agendas, as a top medical priority, depressive conditions. A final contribution of our findings would be the much greater identified tendency to suffer from depression for females, which naturally would demand differentiated treating between both genders when it comes to policy makers for addressing their efforts to minimize the social cost of this disease, given that public resources are scant (specially for emerging economies) and must therefore be focused on the ones that require them the most.
author2 Stein Bronfman, Roberto
author_facet Stein Bronfman, Roberto
Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo
author Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo
author_sort Larraín Dreckmann, Camilo
title Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
title_short Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
title_full Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
title_fullStr Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
title_full_unstemmed Adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
title_sort adverse effects of suffering from clinical depression in the labor market: — a chilean case
publisher Universidad de Chile
publishDate 2012
url http://www.repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/108024
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