The effect of equal division of property regime on subjective health, psychological well-being and investments in health capital
Abstract
This thesis analyses the effects of different marital property regimes on health, well-being
and health related behavior. In particular, it provides an empirical assessment of the effects
of a change from a separate property regime towards a more equal distribution of matrimonial
assets on subjective health, psychological well-being and investments in health capital,
using the variance occurring after a decision by the English House of Lords in 2000. I use
a Difference-in-Difference approach, taking advantage of the panel structure of the British
Household Panel Survey. Results show that neither wives nor husbands experience higher
self-assessed health status or psychological well-being after the reform. The results are mixed
with regards to wives' investment choices in health, where the empirical analysis suggests
that wives substitute leisure time devoted to training activities for health services including
physiotherapy and psychotherapy. However, the results are not robust over different model
specifications.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-07-28Author
Wikström, Jens
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2017:110
Language
eng