Abstract

Positive associations between own educational attainment and own health have been extensively documented. Studies have also shown spousal educational attainment to be associated with own health. This paper investigates the extent to which spousal education contributes to the social gradient in health, net of own education; and whether parts of a seeming spousal education effect are attributable to differences in early-life human capital, as measured by respondents' height and childhood living standard. Furthermore, we investigate the relative contribution of predictors in the regression analysis by use of Shapley value decomposition. We use data from a comprehensive health survey from Northern Norway (conducted in 2015/16, N = 21,083, aged 40 and above). We apply three alternative health outcome measures: the EQ-5D-5L index, a visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) and self-rated health. In all models considered, spousal education is generally positively significant for both men and women. The results also suggest that spousal education is generally more important for men than women. In the sub-sample of individuals having a spouse, decomposition analyses showed that the relative contribution of spousal education to the goodness-of-fit in men's (women's) health was 13% (14%) with the EQ-5D-5L; 25% (20%) with the EQ-VAS and; 30% (21%) with self-rated health. Heterogeneity analyses showed stronger spousal education effects in younger age groups. In conclusion, we have provided empirical evidence that spousal education may contribute to explaining the amplified health gradient in an egalitarian country like Norway.

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