Inequality and psychological well-being in times of COVID-19: evidence from Spain

ddc:330 Well-being 05 social sciences I14 1. No poverty COVID-19 3. Good health Inequality 8. Economic growth 0502 economics and business Original Article J31 10. No inequality D31
DOI: 10.1007/s13209-021-00255-3 Publication Date: 2021-11-09T12:03:02Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractUsing two novel online surveys collected in May and November 2020, we study the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on Spanish households. We document a large and negative effect on household income. By May 2020, the average individual lived in a household that had lost 16% of their pre-pandemic monthly income. Furthermore, this drop was highly unequal: while households in the richest quintile lost 6.8% of their income, those in the poorest quintile lost 27%. We also document that the pandemic deepened the gender-income gap: on average, women experienced a three-percentage point larger income loss than men. While this is consistent with previous findings in the literature, in this paper we document that this effect is driven by women from middle-income households with kids. Finally, we provide evidence that Spanish individuals experienced moderate declines in their levels of psychological well-being. This effect is not different for individuals living in rich or poor households, but the reasons behind well-being losses do differ: richer individuals are more concerned about loss of contact with dear ones, while low-income individuals are more likely to mention loss of income and employment as a key source of emotional distress.
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