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Employment status and perceived health condition: longitudinal data from Italy

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TLDR
Evidence is offered on the relationship between self-reported health and the employment status in Italy using the Survey on Household Income and Wealth (SHIW), which finds that temporary workers, first-job seekers and unemployed individuals are worse off than permanent employees.
Abstract
The considerable increase of non-standard labor contracts, unemployment and inactivity rates raises the question of whether job insecurity and the lack of job opportunities affect physical and mental well-being differently from being employed with an open-ended contract. In this paper we offer evidence on the relationship between Self Reported Health Status (SRHS) and the employment status in Italy using the Survey on Household Income and Wealth; another aim is to investigate whether these potential inequalities have changed with the recent economic downturn (time period 2006-2010). We estimate an ordered logit model with SRHS as response variable based on a fixed-effects approach which has certain advantages with respect to the random-effects formulation and has not been applied before with SRHS data. The fixed-effects nature of the model also allows us to solve the problems of incidental parameters and non-random selection of individuals into different labor market categories. We find that temporary workers, unemployed and inactive individuals are worse off than permanent employees, especially males, young workers, and those living in the center and south of Italy. Health inequalities between unemployed/inactive and permanent workers widen over time for males and young workers, and arise in the north of the country as well.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The increasing predictive validity of self-rated health.

TL;DR: Using the 1980 to 2002 General Social Survey, a repeated cross-sectional study that has been linked to the National Death Index through 2008, this study examines the changing relationship between self-rated health and mortality and finds suggestive evidence that exposure to more health information is the driving force, but also shows that the source of information is very important.
Posted Content

Consistent Estimation of the Fixed Effects Ordered Logit Model

TL;DR: In this article, the authors re-examine existing estimators for the panel data fixed effects ordered logit model, and propose a new one, and study the sampling properties of these estimators in a series of Monte Carlo simulations.
Posted Content

Unemployment and self-assessed health: Evidence from panel data

TL;DR: The results show that the event of becoming unemployed does not matter as such for self-assessed health, and the cross-sectional negative relationship between unemployment and self-ASSessed health is not found longitudinally.
Journal ArticleDOI

Job insecurity and health: A study of 16 European countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the association between job insecurity and self-rated health, and whether the relationship differs by country or individual-level characteristics, and found no effect of job insecurity in Belgium and Sweden.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rethinking the health selection explanation for health inequalities.

TL;DR: It is suggested that it is too easy to write off health selection as of little or no significance, and that reconceptualising the issue within a specifically sociological perspective owing much to labelling theory offers much greater potential for understanding the processes involved.
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