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Body mass index and employment status: A new look
Institution:1. Department of Digestive Surgery, Grenoble Alps University Hospital, Grenoble cedex, France;2. Endocrinology Department, Grenoble Alps University Hospital, Grenoble cedex, France;3. CNRS, UMR 5525, TIMC-IMAG, Domaine de la Merci, Grenoble, France
Abstract:Earlier literature has usually modelled the impact of obesity on employment status as a binary choice (employed, yes/no). I provide new evidence on the impact of obesity on employment status by treating the dependent variable as a as a multinomial choice variable. Using data from a representative English survey, with measured height and weight on parents and children, I define employment status as one of four: working; looking for paid work; permanently not working due to disability; and, looking after home or family. I use a multinomial logit model controlling for a set of covariates. I also run instrumental variable models, instrumenting for Body Mass Index (BMI) based on genetic variation in weight. I find that BMI and obesity significantly increase the probability of “not working due to disability”. The results for the other employment outcomes are less clear. My findings also indicate that BMI affects employment through its effect on health. Factors other than health may be less important in explaining the impact of BMI/obesity on employment.
Keywords:Obesity  Body mass index  Employment status  Employment disability
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