The notion that depressions lower life expectancy feels intuitively correct. But the facts don't really bear it out.Lumbergh21 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 09, 2020 10:03 pm It's been building for a while as I see a summer being wasted and an economy destroyed, which by the way, could mean 10's of thousands of additional deaths per year for year's to come and reduced life spans in general due to the affects a large economic depression would have on nutrition, medical care, and health in general. But those are acceptable I guess.
This is something I see people say a lot... but looking at data one finds the vast vast vast majority of economic recessions and depressions see... frequently no decrease, and sometimes an age-adjusted increase in lifespan. (Raw death numbers don't tell the whole story in an aging population.)
e.g. the following countries life expectancy charts:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D7NabOoVsAET4oL.jpg
Even the drop that appeared to occur during the Depression in the US was just the numbers bouncing around within the normal span of noise/randomness over the previous 30 years. The only thing that really stands out as fundamentally a change from the usual trajectory on this older data is the 1918 flu...
https://www.disabled-world.com/pics/1/a ... ctancy.png
There's lots of reasons why: people are driving less - which is both a direct killer through accidents and indirect killer through obesity, people do less risky behavior overall, they're even exercising more because it's a free hobby, and factories are putting out fewer pollutants: the tiny particulates in smog don't just kill people with emphesyma, COPD, and lung cancer years later, they're also causative in both the plaque formation and inflammatory pathways that lead to heart attacks, smoking and drinking also tend to decrease during recessions simply because they're expensive hobbies, etc.
A paper analyzing at the decline in mortality in Europe during the recession 10 years ago - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6368579/
Life expectancy during the Great Depression:
https://www.pnas.org/content/106/41/17290
TL;DR Suicide increases during a depression, but most every other cause of death decreases.