Two decades of data shows just a small pay bump has huge health benefits

Authored by inverse.com and submitted by IronGiantisreal
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Money can’t buy you happiness. But as Ariana Grande says “Whoever said ‘money can’t solve your problems’ must not have had enough money to solve ‘em.”

Rhymes aside, there may be a science-backed reason why making more money can make you healthier, if not happier, too.

In a new study, researchers found raising the minimum wage by just $1 is linked to a drop in suicide of between 3.5 and 6 percent. The finding adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests increasing the minimum age could have an outsized effect on mental health.

To find out what happens when you pay people $1 more per hour, University of Pennsylvania researchers Elena Andreyeva and Benjamin Ukert looked at 26 years of data — from 1990 to 2016. They focused on people who had completed a high school education or less, aged 18 to 64, from all 50 states.

Aside from the overall drop in suicide rates, the study suggests that the benefits of the wage increase are most pronounced when unemployment across the country is high.

The study was published this week in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

Connecting life expectancy, health, and money

Over the past 30 years, life expectancy is tragically linked to socioeconomic status, according to the new study. Over that period, for the richest 20 percent of Americans, life expectancy increased; it barely changed for the middle 60 percent; and it decreased for the poorest 20 percent. Raising minimum pay could help to address the underlying economic problems that result in these health disparities.

Two other studies back this theory up. They also find an association between higher minimum wage and lower suicide rates.

One, published in April 2019 in the National Bureau of Economic Research, suggests that a 10 percent bump in both minimum wage and earned income tax credit could prevent around 1,230 suicides each year. The other, like the BMJ study, looked at the effect of a $1 wage increase over 10 years and found a drop in suicide rates. That study was published in May 2019 in the American Journal of Preventative Medicine.

There may be other health benefits in store if the minimum wage rises.

A 2018 study found that state-level minimum wage increases — those that go above the federal minimum wage — may affect heart health. A $1 minimum wage increase is associated with a drop in 6 per 100,000 heart disease deaths each year.

But it’s possible that not everyone stands to benefit equally from the extra dollar. A separate 2018 study in the International Journal of Health Economics and Management found minimum-wage increases may contribute to more risky health habits, especially in terms of diet, with people eating fewer fruits and veggies and higher obesity risks on average.

A deeper analysis of those findings — published by the same pair of researchers as the new study — showed the breakdown of those effects. The drop in overall health seen in the study was driven by older white people. But other demographic groups, and nonwhite women in particular, did see health benefits from minimum wage increase.

All of these studies demonstrate that extra cash has different effects across different groups of people, but the body of evidence so far suggests that — while money might not buy happiness — just a small bump in pay can go a long way towards protecting workers’ mental and physical health.

got_outta_bed_4_this on January 9th, 2020 at 04:43 UTC »

"Just a dollar" at minimum wage is more than a 13% raise.

Alieneater on January 9th, 2020 at 02:55 UTC »

You can't really say for sure that that higher minimum wage "leads to a drop in suicide --" it correlates with it. We can easily imagine why there should be a relationship between these factors, but it's not like we can do a real scientific experiment with a control group.

Kittii_Kat on January 8th, 2020 at 22:00 UTC »

I'm interested in seeing the correlation between education and healthcare costs now.

(College debt is the primary driver for my depression and hopelessness for the last decade, despite being in a field that can pay well)