Decomposing the effect of social policies on population health and inequalities: an empirical
example of unemployment benefits
Engelsk titel: Decomposing the effect of social policies on population health and inequalities: an empirical
example of unemployment benefits
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Författare:
Ferrarini, Tommy
;
Nelson, Kenneth
;
Sjöberg, Ola
Email: Ola.Sjoberg@sofi.su.se
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 25
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 15069427
Sammanfattning
Aim: The purpose of this study is to discuss and empirically contrast different
conceptualizations and operationalizations of social policies in analysing health and educational
differences in health cross-nationally. Methods: Country-level institutional and expenditure data on
unemployment benefit schemes and individual-level data from the EU-SILC for 23 countries were
used to analyse the association between unemployment benefits and self-assessed health for
individuals with different educational attainment. Results: The analyses indicate that higher coverage
rate (i.e. the proportion of the relevant population eligible for benefits) is associated with better self-
related health among both low- and high-educated individuals, but is not linked to smaller educational
differences in health. In contrast, replacement rate (i.e. the amount of benefits received) in isolation is
not related to self-assessed health. However, in countries where coverage rates are high, higher
replacement rates are associated with better health among both low- and high-educated individuals
and smaller educational differences in health. Conclusions: Decomposing unemployment benefit
programmes into two main dimensions - the proportion in the labour force covered by such
programmes and the replacement rate received in case of unemployment - may present further
insights into institutional mechanisms linking macro-level social policies to individual-level health
outcomes.