Our empirical strategy exploits a technological feature of the telecommunication infrastructure that generated substantial variation in the availability of Internet access across households: the distance of a household from a network node.
Using a difference-in-differences design, we find that access to broadband internet when initially deployed is associated with a 0.6 percentage point increase in long-term disability rates due to mental health conditions, about 30% of the sample mean.
These effects are concentrated among knowledge-intensive sector workers, and in industries with a higher share of jobs that can be done from home. We find no impact of internet access on the probability of long-term disability due to other medical reasons, such as musculoskeletal conditions.
This paper contributes to a broader understanding of the upward trend in work-related illnesses—burnout and chronic stress—and their role in the expansion of disability insurance programs.
Langeveld building, room 3.18.
Sprekers
- Sofía Fernández-Guerrico (Universität Konstanz)
Locatie
Burgemeester Oudlaan 50,3062PA Rotterdam