Sunday, September 10, 2017

Research associates painkillers with 1/5 of recent reduction in labor force; Kentucky is among the most affected states

Brookings Institution map; click on it to see a larger version that displays counties more clearly.

Princeton University economist Alan Krueger found in 2016 that almost half of prime working-age (25-54) men who are not in the labor force take pain medication daily, two-thirds of them by way of prescriptions. He has taken a closer look at the data, and says increased use of opioids could account for one-fifth of the recent shrinkage in the American workforce—as defined by the rate of participation in the labor force, the proportion of people employed or looking for work. That phenomenon is seen in Kentucky more than in most other states.

Krueger's new paper and data, published in the Fall 2017 edition of Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, "suggests that the increase in opioid prescriptions from 1999 to 2015 could account for about 20 percent of the observed decline in men’s labor-force participation during that same period, and 25 percent of the observed decline in women’s labor-force participation," Fred Dews reports for the Brookings Institution. "Over the last 15 years, the labor-force participation rate fell more in counties where more opioids were prescribed."
Kentucky Chamber of Commerce chart; for report, click here.
Labor-force participation has been declining for about 15 years, "reaching a near 40-year low of 62.4 percent in September 2015," Dews notes. "The participation rate of American women had fallen from the top group of OECD countries to near the bottom," according to the international Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Kentucky's labor-participation rate is lower, 57.6 percent in 2016, the fourth lowest in the nation; it was 62 percent in February 2009, the low point of the recession, before unemployment benefits began to run out and more people started dropping out of the workforce. It dropped sharply in 2014.

Krueger's earlier research cited several possible causes for shrinking labor forces, all of which plague Kentucky: Incarceration, disability, drug and alcohol abuse and demographics (low education attainment, dropout rate, poverty, health status). Krueger's latest work suggests that while much of the decline comes from the aging population "and other trends that pre-date the Great Recession (for example, increased school enrollment of younger workers), an increase in opioid prescription rates might also play an important role in the decline, and undoubtedly compounds the problem as many people who are out of the labor force find it difficult to return to work because of reliance on pain medication," Dews writes.

But is the trend more because people on painkillers are less likely to work, or because people not working are more likely to be on painkillers? “Regardless of the direction of causality, the opioid crisis and depressed labor-force participation are now intertwined in many parts of the U.S,” Krueger writes.

The research reveals regional differences in medical practices. "A 10 percent increase in the amount of opioids prescribed per capita in a county is associated with a 1 percent increase in the share of individuals who report taking a pain medication on any given day, holding health and other factors constant," Dews reports.

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