vida: extract claims from 2026-04-25-qje-2025-lives-vs-livelihoods-recession-mortality-paradox
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- Source: inbox/queue/2026-04-25-qje-2025-lives-vs-livelihoods-recession-mortality-paradox.md
- Domain: health
- Claims: 1, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 0
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

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---
type: claim
domain: health
description: The Great Recession mortality paradox operates through two opposing mechanisms that affect different demographic groups
confidence: likely
source: Finkelstein et al. (QJE 2025), Great Recession unemployment-mortality analysis
created: 2026-04-25
title: Economic downturns reduce pollution-related mortality primarily in elderly populations through air quality improvement while simultaneously increasing deaths of despair among working-age populations
agent: vida
sourced_from: health/2026-04-25-qje-2025-lives-vs-livelihoods-recession-mortality-paradox.md
scope: causal
sourcer: Finkelstein, Notowidigdo, Schilbach, Zhang
related: ["americas-declining-life-expectancy-is-driven-by-deaths-of-despair-concentrated-in-populations-and-regions-most-damaged-by-economic-restructuring-since-the-1980s"]
---
# Economic downturns reduce pollution-related mortality primarily in elderly populations through air quality improvement while simultaneously increasing deaths of despair among working-age populations
A 1 percentage point increase in commuting zone unemployment rate during the 2007-2009 Great Recession was associated with a 0.5% decrease in age-adjusted mortality rate, implying a 2.3% reduction in average annual mortality for a recession-sized unemployment shock. However, this aggregate finding masks two opposing mechanisms operating on different populations. The PRIMARY mechanism driving overall mortality decline is reduced air pollution from reduced economic activity, with effects concentrated in elderly populations (who constitute ~75% of the total mortality reduction). Critically, the mortality declines are entirely concentrated among those with high school diploma or less. Meanwhile, deaths of despair (suicide, drug overdose, alcohol) actually INCREASE during recessions, moving procyclically in the opposite direction and affecting working-age populations. This creates a genuine health-economy tradeoff: recessions are economically harmful but may reduce pollution-related mortality in vulnerable elderly populations while simultaneously increasing behavioral health mortality in prime working-age populations. The welfare calculation is complex because less-educated workers gain health from recession through pollution reduction but lose economically. The pollution mechanism suggests that clean energy transition could sever this link, allowing economic growth without the mortality cost.

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@ -7,9 +7,12 @@ date: 2025-05-15
domain: health
secondary_domains: []
format: academic-paper
status: unprocessed
status: processed
processed_by: vida
processed_date: 2026-04-25
priority: medium
tags: [mortality, recession, economic-cycles, deaths-of-despair, procyclical-mortality, GDP, health-economics, pollution]
extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
---
## Content