Doing good, feeling good: causal evidence from volunteers
Authors: Catherine Deri Armstrong, Rose Anne Devlin, and Forough Seifi
Overview
Abstract (English)
Volunteers are reputedly healthier and happier than their non-volunteering counterparts. But is this a causal link or are healthier, happy individuals simply more likely to volunteer? Some papers have attempted to identify the causal relationship using an instrumental variable methodology, mostly relying on measures of religiosity as instruments for volunteering – however, religiosity may also affect health thus calling into question the validity of this approach. We rely on a novel instrument, a measure physical proximity to volunteer opportunities, to help identify the causal link from volunteering to health and happiness using econometric regression techniques. We find that volunteering is a robustly significant predictor of health, and positively affects life satisfaction for all but those aged under 35.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Catherine Deri Armstrong, Rose Anne Devlin, and Forough Seifi |
Publication Year | 2020 |
Title | Doing good, feeling good: causal evidence from volunteers |
Volume | ePub ahead of Print |
Journal Name | Review of Social Economy |
Pages | 23-Jan |
Publication Language | English |
- Catherine Deri Armstrong
- Catherine Deri Armstrong, Rose Anne Devlin, and Forough Seifi
- Doing good, feeling good: causal evidence from volunteers
- Review of Social Economy
- ePub ahead of Print
- 2020
- 23-Jan