Association of income and the EITC refund size with mental health and health behaviours
Outcome | Model 1: association of income with health (OLS) | Model 2: association of EITC with health (OLS) | Model 3: effect of income on health (IV) |
Psychological distress | −0.026** (−0.035 to –0.018) | −0.070*
(−0.11 to –0.031) | −0.13** (−0.21 to –0.059) |
Very good/excellent health | 0.0013** (0.00085 to 0.0018) | 0.0000046 (−0.0027 to 0.0027) | −0.0028 (−0.0096 to 0.0040) |
Currently drink alcohol | 0.00098** (0.00047 to 0.0015) | 0.0025 (−0.00039 to 0.0055) | 0.011 (−0.0023 to 0.025) |
3+ drinks per day | −0.00012 (−0.00053 to 0.00030) | −0.0016 (−0.0039 to 0.00078) | −0.0071 (−0.018 to –0.0038) |
Currently smoke | 0.0018 (−0.00013 to 0.00050) | 0.00086 (−0.0012 to 0.0029) | 0.0044 (−0.0060 to 0.015) |
Cigarettes per day | 0.012** (0.0056 to 0.019) | 0.0022 (−0.033 to 0.038) | 0.011 (−0.17 to 0.19) |
Study sample was drawn from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics for survey years 1985–2015. All models involved multivariable linear regressions, adjusting for age and age-squared, education, marital status, number of children, household inflation-adjusted pre-tax earned income and income-squared, year fixed effects, and individual fixed effects. Robust SEs were clustered at the individual level. Coefficients are presented per US$1000 of income or EITC.
Model 1 represents the OLS model, regressing each outcome on pre-tax inflation-adjusted household income.
Model 2 represents the reduced form of the IV analysis, regressing each outcome on EITC refund size.
Model 3 represents the IV analysis, with EITC refund size as the instrument for post-tax inflation-adjusted household income.
*p<0.05, **p<0.01.
EITC, earned income tax credit; IV, instrumental variable; OLS, ordinary least squares.