Health, Human Capital, and Domestic Violence

We treat health as a form of human capital and hypothesize that women with more human capital face stronger incentives to make costly investments with future payoffs, such as avoiding abusive partners and reducing drug use. To test this hypothesis, we exploit the unanticipated introduction of an HIV...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of human resources 2021-01, Vol.56 (4), p.997-1030
Hauptverfasser: Papageorge, Nicholas W., Pauley, Gwyn C., Cohen, Mardge, Wilson, Tracey E., Hamilton, Barton H., Pollak, Robert A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We treat health as a form of human capital and hypothesize that women with more human capital face stronger incentives to make costly investments with future payoffs, such as avoiding abusive partners and reducing drug use. To test this hypothesis, we exploit the unanticipated introduction of an HIV treatment, HAART, which dramatically improved HIV+ women's health. We find that after the introduction of HAART HIV+ women who experienced increases in expected longevity exhibited a decrease in domestic violence of 15 percent and in drug use of 15-20 percent. We rule out confounding via secular trends using a control group of healthier women.
ISSN:0022-166X
1548-8004
DOI:10.3368/jhr.56.4.1115-7543R5