Education, Cognition, Health Knowledge and Health Behavior

Working Paper: NBER ID: w17949

Authors: Naci H. Mocan; Duha Tore Altindag

Abstract: Using data from the NLSY97 we analyze the impact of education on health behaviors, measured by smoking and heavy drinking. Controlling for health knowledge does not influence the impact of education on health behaviors, supporting the productive efficiency hypothesis. Although cognition, as measured by test scores, appears to have an effect on the relationship between education and health behaviors, this effect disappears once the models control for family fixed effects. Similarly, the impact of education on smoking and heavy drinking is the same between those with and without a learning disability, suggesting that cognition is not likely to be a significant factor in explaining the impact of education on health behaviors.

Keywords: education; health behaviors; cognition; health knowledge

JEL Codes: I12; I20


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Education (I29)Health behaviors (I12)
Health knowledge (I10)Health behaviors (I12)
Cognitive ability (G53)Health behaviors (I12)
Learning disabilities (I24)Health behaviors (I12)

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