The Shared Non-cognitive Roots of Health and Socioeconomic Status: Evidence from the US

TitleThe Shared Non-cognitive Roots of Health and Socioeconomic Status: Evidence from the US
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsAlessandro, B, Coriele, C, Luca, Z
Series TitleDepartment of Economics Working Paper Series
Document Number14
InstitutionUniversity of Verona
CityVerona, Italy
ISSN Number2036-2919
KeywordsBivariate Model, Non-Cognitive Factors, Self-reported Health Status, Subjective Socioeconomic Status
Abstract

A voluminous literature established a strong relationship between subjective health and
socioeconomic status measures. We test the idea that self-reported health and subjective
socioeconomic status have “shared non-cognitive roots”, i.e., that the same personality traits
significantly affect both status variables, even after controlling for the complex relationships
involving objective and subjective measures across the two domains. To this aim, we estimate
a bivariate model based on longitudinal large-scale data (30,675 observations) from six waves
(2006-2016) of the US Health and Retirement Study. Our findings strongly support our
conjecture, as all the “Big Five” traits are significantly related to self-reported health and
subjective socioeconomic status with the same sign, even after controlling for both objective
measures and once the other subjective measure is considered. These results point to a novel,
direct channel through which non-cognitive factors similarly influence self-evaluations across
distinct, though strongly intertwined, domains.

URLhttp://dse.univr.it/home/workingpapers/wp2020n14.pdf
Citation Key10969