Inequality of opportunity in a land of equal opportunities: The impact of parents' health and wealth on their offspring's quality of life in Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27423Date
2022-09-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Method: We use unique survey data (N=20,150) from the egalitarian country of Norway to investigate if diferences in circumstances produce unfair inequalities in health. We estimate cross-sectional regression models which include age and sex as covariates. We estimate two model specifcations. The frst represents a narrow IOp by estimating the contributions of parents’ health and wealth on HRQoL, while the second includes own education and thus represents a broader IOp, alternatively it provides a comparison of the relative contributions of an efort variable and the two sets of circumstance variables.
Results: We fnd strong associations between the circumstance variables and HRQoL. A more detailed examination showed particularly strong associations between parental psychological problems and respondents’ anxiety and depression. Our Shapley decomposition analysis suggests that parents’ health and wealth are each as important as own educational attainment for explaining inequalities in adult HRQoL.
Conclusion: We provide evidence for the presence of the lasting efect of early life circumstances on adult health that persists even in one of the most egalitarian countries in the world. This suggests that there may be an upper limit to how much a generous welfare state can contribute to equal opportunities.