Abstract

This paper used Hobfoll’s conservation of resources theory as a theoretical framework to investigate which kinds of resource loss predicted the emotional well-being (EWB) of ethnic minorities and majority populations during a period of crisis. Data were collected from a national representative survey conducted by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics during the COVID-19 pandemic. The sample included 1157 respondents, including 174 Israeli Palestinian citizens (ethnic minority) and 983 Israeli Jews (majority population). Measures of EWB, actual losses and threats of losses of economic, social, and health resources were examined. The results showed that the losses of economic, social, and health resources reduced the EWB of individuals. Negative effects of the actual losses of resources on EWB were greater than those of the perceived threats of loss. The largest effect was for economic resources. There were differences in effects between the ethnic minorities and the majority populations. The study revealed that for the ethnic minorities, who are less powerful and more disadvantaged than ethnic majorities, the depletion of already deficient resources during time of crisis is more important for predicting their EWB than for the majority populations.

Highlights

  • During crises, people experience losses of economic, social, and health resources as well as threats to these resources [1,2]

  • The factor structure and measurement invariance of emotional well-being (EWB) were justified by means of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA)

  • The study revealed that the effects of actual losses are more pronounced in time of crisis than the effects of potential losses

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Summary

Introduction

People experience losses of economic, social, and health resources as well as threats to these resources [1,2]. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is an example of such a crisis, when losses of all kinds of resources and threats to them are widespread. Studies of the psychological status of populations in different countries during the COVID-19 pandemic revealed relatively high levels of depression, anxiety, stress, and psychological distress [5]. The crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic is multidimensional, where losses and threats to health are accompanied by losses and threats to individuals’ economic and social resources. Anxiety and depressive symptoms are reactions to uncertainty, perceived threats, and multiple losses of resources associated with the pandemic [6]

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