Abstract

Under the backdrop of China’s aging population and continuous rising housing price and base on theories pertaining to social status seeking, marriage matching and intergenerational family relationships, use the 2010 and 2014 CFPS national survey micro data, we examine the impact of rising housing price on the health of middle-aged and elderly people and the underlying mechanisms. Rising housing price has a significant negative impact on the health of middle-aged and elderly people, and this effect is also reflected in their physical health, mental acuity and emotional well-being. The internal mechanism is that social status seeking motivation plays a significant mediator role. Through further analysis, we find that competitive saving motive is another intermediate mechanism that causes rising housing price to affect the health of middle-aged and elderly people; it is complementary to the social status seeking motivation. What’s more, the mediation effect of the competitive saving motive is notably heterogeneous, as it exists only for middle-aged and elderly people with male or noncollege educated child but does not exist for those with female or college educated child.

Highlights

  • Individual health has been a research hotspot worldwide during the past decade

  • We further propose that rising housing price broadens the income gap between middle-aged and elderly people, and promotes their social status seeking motivation

  • The results suggest that rising housing price has a significant negative impact, on the physical health of middle-aged and elderly people and on their mental acuity and their emotional well-being

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Individual health has been a research hotspot worldwide during the past decade. In 2009, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) included “Health and Longevity” in the Human Development Index [1]. Most researchers explore the factors affecting individuals’ health, these researches can be roughly divided into two categories. Many studies have focused on the influence of macro factors (e.g., GDP, income gap, urbanization, economic and political regime, health insurance, education investment, and taxation) on individuals’ health [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. This category represents the research mainstream, and the relationship between income gap and health inequality is the most popular topic. Some have proposed that the income gap harms individuals’ health [11], while some

Objectives
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