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The effect of job loss on risky financial decision-making

Public and global health

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published December 23, 2024

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    08-01-2025 to 08-01-2026

    Available on-demand until 8th January 2026

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Job loss is a common and disruptive life event. It is known to have numerous long-term negative effects on financial, health, and social outcomes. While the negative effects of becoming unemployed on health and well-being are well understood, the influence of job loss on financial decisions has received little attention. Across a large-scale survey (N=37,854), spending data from a bank (N=404,470), and two online experiments (total N=1,403

), we find that job loss increases financial risk-taking. First, in survey data, job loss is associated with elevated levels of self-reported financial risk-taking and lottery ticket purchases. Next, using administrative data from a large bank, we find consistent causal evidence of the influence of job loss on gambling spending. Although total spending decreases after job loss, gambling spending is less affected than our control categories. Finally, we turn to two incentive-compatible manipulations of job loss operationalized in a lab setting. We find that this experimental manipulation increases the take-up of financial risks. The current finding that job loss increases financial risk-taking could accentuate long-term negative financial effects of job loss.

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