Abstract

We examine the contribution of human capital to health in 23 countries worldwide using the OECD Survey of Adult Skills, a unique large-scale international assessment of 16–65 year olds that contains information about self-reported health, schooling, cognitive skills and indicators of interpersonal trust, which represents the cognitive dimension of social capital. We identify cross-national differences in education, skill and social capital gradients in self-reported health and explore the interaction between human capital and social capital to examine if and where social capital is a mediator or a moderator of years of schooling and cognitive abilities. We find large education gaps in self-reported health across all countries in our sample and a strong positive relationship between self-reported health and both literacy and trust in the majority of countries. Education and skill gradients in self-reported health appear to be largest in the United States and smallest in Italy, France, Sweden and Finland. On average around 5.5% of both the schooling gap in self-reported health and the literacy gap in self-reported health can be explained by the higher levels of interpersonal trust that better educated/more skilled individuals have, although the mediating role of trust varies considerably across countries. We find no evidence of a moderation effect: the relationships between health and years of schooling and health and cognitive skills are similar among individuals with different levels of trust.

Highlights

  • Poor health is a major burden for the affected individual, and for governments [1]

  • We investigate between country differences in education and skill gradients in health and explore if social capital is a mediator or moderator of the relationships between education, cognitive skills and health

  • We explore cross-national differences in the within-country relationship between human capital, social capital and self-reported health by estimating, for each country in our sample, the individual level relationship between years of schooling, literacy proficiency and interpersonal trust controlling for background characteristics

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Poor health is a major burden for the affected individual, and for governments [1]. There is a large body of evidence highlighting considerable disparities in health across population subgroups, with individuals with low socio-economic backgrounds and poor educational. Health and Social Capital attainment being disproportionately more likely to be in ill health [3,4,5,6,7]. New emphasis has been put on the social determinants of health [8]. Social characteristics add to the effects of material circumstances, from housing to transport, from working conditions to the quality of public services and institutions

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call