Economic shocks, food insufficiency and mental health: Evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic
Yuxuan Pan, Linlin Fan, Stephan Goetz

TL;DR
The study shows that food insufficiency during the pandemic had a bigger impact on mental health than income loss, highlighting the need for targeted policies.
Contribution
The novel finding is that food insufficiency affects mental health more than unemployment or income loss during crises.
Findings
Food insufficiency had a larger negative impact on mental health than income loss during the pandemic.
The effects of food insufficiency and income loss on mental health varied across different socioeconomic groups.
Policies should target disadvantaged groups to improve mental well-being and food sufficiency during crises.
Abstract
Millions of Americans experienced a sudden loss of income along with hunger early in the COVID-19 outbreak. Using Household Pulse Survey data from April 23, 2020 to March 29, 2021, we find the pandemic significantly impacted both food sufficiency and mental health, with food insufficiency having a larger negative impact on mental health than income loss. We do not find a statistically significant effect of unemployment on mental health. These findings were confirmed in various sensitivity analysis. We also discover heterogeneous effects of food insufficiency, unemployment, and income loss on mental health across different socioeconomic groups. Larger effects of food insufficiency were found in mortgage paying-households, among males, and in non-metro areas, and larger effects of income loss were found in rent paying-households, among females, and in non-metro areas. These results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood Security and Health in Diverse Populations · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts · Employment and Welfare Studies
