The Tenuous Ecological Divorce and Unemployment Link with Suicide: A U.S. Panel Analysis 1968-2020
Mitch Kunce
Journal of Statistical and Econometric Methods, 2022, vol. 11, issue 3, 2
Abstract:
In 2020, close to 46,000 people died from suicide in the U.S. Globally, rates of suicide have declined some in the last 20 years − not so for the U.S. In the last two decades, the U.S. has seen more than a 25% increase in age-adjusted suicide rates. Recent reviews of the sociologically grounded ecological studies of suicide find jurisdictional divorce and unemployment rates to be key suicide risk factors. However, a new vein of this literature is beginning to scrutinize long-established ecological links based on faulty statistical methodologies that previously ignored variable non-stationarity and the lack of series cointegration. The purpose herein is to fully dissect the tenuous ecological relationships between U.S. annual divorce rates, unemployment rates and suicide rates using a 53 year non-stationary panel of all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Results suggest no statistically imperious association, short-run or long-run, between suicide rates in the U.S. and the long-established risk factors divorce and unemployment rates. Implications of this dissection advocate for a shift in research focus to the individual − controlling for idiosyncratic specific-effects and key social processes.  JEL classification numbers: B55, C18, C49.
Keywords: Suicide rates; Cointegration; Ecological analysis; Non-stationary panel. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spt:stecon:v:11:y:2022:i:3:f:11_3_2
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