The Great Divide: Education, Despair, and Death

Author:

Case Anne1,Deaton Angus12

Affiliation:

1. School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA;,

2. Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

Abstract

Deaths of despair, morbidity, and emotional distress continue to rise in the United States, largely borne by those without a college degree—the majority of American adults—for many of whom the economy and society are no longer delivering. Concurrently, all-cause mortality in the United States is diverging by education in a way not seen in other rich countries. We review the rising prevalence of pain, despair, and suicide among those without a bachelor's degree. Pain and despair created a baseline demand for opioids, but the escalation of addiction came from pharma and its political enablers. We examine the politics of despair, or how less-educated people have abandoned and been abandoned by the Democratic Party. Whereas healthier states once voted Republican in presidential elections, now the less-healthy states do. We review deaths during COVID-19, finding that mortality in 2020 maintained or exacerbated existing relative mortality differences between those with and without college degrees.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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