The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria

This paper examines the links between adverse events, depression, and decision making in Nigeria. It investigates how events such as conflicts, shocks, and deaths can affect short-term perceptions of welfare, as well as longer term decisions on eco...

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Main Authors: Jamison, Julian, McGee, Kevin Robert, Oseni, Gbemisola, Perng, Julie, Sato, Ryoko, Tanaka, Tomomi, Vakis, Renos
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/647701545257537283/The-Relationship-between-Conflicts-Economic-Shocks-and-Death-with-Depression-Economic-Activities-and-Human-Capital-Investment-in-Nigeria
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31086
id okr-10986-31086
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-310862021-06-08T14:42:45Z The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria Jamison, Julian McGee, Kevin Robert Oseni, Gbemisola Perng, Julie Sato, Ryoko Tanaka, Tomomi Vakis, Renos CONFLICT ECONOMIC SHOCKS DEPRESSION DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOM MENTAL HEALTH LABOR PRODUCTIVITY NEGATIVE LIFE EVENT NEUROECONOMICS CONGITION DECISION MAKING HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT This paper examines the links between adverse events, depression, and decision making in Nigeria. It investigates how events such as conflicts, shocks, and deaths can affect short-term perceptions of welfare, as well as longer term decisions on economic activities and human capital investments. First, the findings show that exposure to conflict has the largest and strongest relationship with depression, associated with a 15.3 percentage point increase in the probability of reporting depressive symptoms (from a base of 22 percent). This is equivalent to a reduction in annual per capita income of around US$52 (in present day terms). Second, the study randomized the timing of the module on adverse events with respect to the mental health module. The analysis finds that individuals who were reminded about their history of adverse events (provided that they had one) have a 6.5 percentage point higher probability of reporting depressive symptoms. The final sets of results show that depression is associated with lower labor force participation and child educational investment. People with depressive symptoms are 8 percentage points less likely to work; this is driven by a reduction in engagement in agricultural activities for men and self-employment for women. In addition, households with a parent exhibiting depressive symptoms spend 20 percentage points less on education. These results suggest that there is a direct link between mental health, welfare perceptions, and decision making, beyond the indirect link via exposure to adverse effects. 2018-12-28T17:32:36Z 2018-12-28T17:32:36Z 2018-12 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/647701545257537283/The-Relationship-between-Conflicts-Economic-Shocks-and-Death-with-Depression-Economic-Activities-and-Human-Capital-Investment-in-Nigeria http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31086 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8685 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa Nigeria
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CONFLICT
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
DEPRESSION
DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOM
MENTAL HEALTH
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
NEGATIVE LIFE EVENT
NEUROECONOMICS
CONGITION
DECISION MAKING
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
spellingShingle CONFLICT
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
DEPRESSION
DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOM
MENTAL HEALTH
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
NEGATIVE LIFE EVENT
NEUROECONOMICS
CONGITION
DECISION MAKING
HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT
Jamison, Julian
McGee, Kevin Robert
Oseni, Gbemisola
Perng, Julie
Sato, Ryoko
Tanaka, Tomomi
Vakis, Renos
The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
geographic_facet Africa
Nigeria
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8685
description This paper examines the links between adverse events, depression, and decision making in Nigeria. It investigates how events such as conflicts, shocks, and deaths can affect short-term perceptions of welfare, as well as longer term decisions on economic activities and human capital investments. First, the findings show that exposure to conflict has the largest and strongest relationship with depression, associated with a 15.3 percentage point increase in the probability of reporting depressive symptoms (from a base of 22 percent). This is equivalent to a reduction in annual per capita income of around US$52 (in present day terms). Second, the study randomized the timing of the module on adverse events with respect to the mental health module. The analysis finds that individuals who were reminded about their history of adverse events (provided that they had one) have a 6.5 percentage point higher probability of reporting depressive symptoms. The final sets of results show that depression is associated with lower labor force participation and child educational investment. People with depressive symptoms are 8 percentage points less likely to work; this is driven by a reduction in engagement in agricultural activities for men and self-employment for women. In addition, households with a parent exhibiting depressive symptoms spend 20 percentage points less on education. These results suggest that there is a direct link between mental health, welfare perceptions, and decision making, beyond the indirect link via exposure to adverse effects.
format Working Paper
author Jamison, Julian
McGee, Kevin Robert
Oseni, Gbemisola
Perng, Julie
Sato, Ryoko
Tanaka, Tomomi
Vakis, Renos
author_facet Jamison, Julian
McGee, Kevin Robert
Oseni, Gbemisola
Perng, Julie
Sato, Ryoko
Tanaka, Tomomi
Vakis, Renos
author_sort Jamison, Julian
title The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
title_short The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
title_full The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
title_fullStr The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed The Relationship between Conflicts, Economic Shocks, and Death with Depression, Economic Activities, and Human Capital Investment in Nigeria
title_sort relationship between conflicts, economic shocks, and death with depression, economic activities, and human capital investment in nigeria
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/647701545257537283/The-Relationship-between-Conflicts-Economic-Shocks-and-Death-with-Depression-Economic-Activities-and-Human-Capital-Investment-in-Nigeria
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31086
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