The smoker’s wage penalty puzzle: evidence from Britain
Lasse F. Brune
No 2007-31, ISER Working Paper Series from Institute for Social and Economic Research
Abstract:
This work investigates the effect of smoking on wages for male workers using panel data from Britain for the period of 1991-2005. The strong negative correlation of smoking and wages found in a crosssectional analysis reduces substantially when accounting for unobserved individual heterogeneity using Fixed Effects estimation. I find a statistically significant wage penalty that is causally due to smoking of about -2% for smokers over those who quit. Further analysis indicates, however, that the negative effect might be underestimated when comparing with those who never started smoking or quit a long time ago.
Date: 2007-12-21
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hea and nep-lab
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