Analysis Shows Suicide Is Highly Driven By Unemployment And Underemployment
Analysis led by University of Sydney researchers has revealed causal effects of unemployment and underemployment on suicide rates in Australia, with an estimated 10 percent of reported suicides over a 13-year period resulting from labour underutilisation.
A study examining unemployment and underemployment figures and suicide rates in Australia has found both were significant drivers of suicide mortality between 2004-2016.
The researchers say the findings indicate that economic policies such as a Job Guarantee, which prioritise full employment, should be a core part of any comprehensive national suicide prevention strategy.
Predictive modelling also revealed an estimated 9.5 percent of suicides reported during that time resulted directly from unemployment and underemployment.
The analysis used national data, which included numbers of suicides per month provided by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, and monthly unemployment and underemployment statistics from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
The 13-year period includes the Global Financial Crisis (mid 2007 to early 2009) and the beginning of the Robodebt scheme (July 2016).
Between 2004 – 2016, approximately 1 in 10 of the 32,331 suicides in total were estimated to result from labour underutilisation (3071 suicides or 9.5 percent).
1575 suicides were attributed to unemployment (4.9 percent of total suicide mortality). 1496 suicides are attributed to underemployment (4.6 percent).
Ensuring adequate employment for every person seeking work is an effective way to reduce the immense personal and social cost of intentional self-harm and suicide.
Dr Adam Skinner
The study, published in Science Advances, was led by researchers from the Brain and Mind Centre at the University of Sydney.
The results are consistent with epidemiological studies (independent of this study) that found changes from employment to unemployment tend to produce a significant increase in psychological distress.
“Our analyses provide evidence that rates of unemployment and underemployment were significant drivers of suicide mortality in Australia during that time,” said lead researcher Dr Adam Skinner from the Brain and Mind Centre.
“Ensuring adequate employment for every person seeking work is an effective way to reduce the immense personal and social cost of intentional self-harm and suicide.”
The study used a relatively new analytical method called convergent cross mapping to confirm causal effects of underemployment and unemployment over time on suicidal behaviour.
The strength of convergent cross mapping is that it allows researchers to detect cause and effect in complex systems, where significant correlation between variables does not necessarily indicate causality.
Predictive modelling was used to estimate the number of suicides caused by labour underutilisation per month.
“The study confirms that a high priority in suicide prevention should be full employment, particularly as we now face economic uncertainty in Australia,” said Brain and Mind Centre co-director, Professor Ian Hickie AM.
“Rising unemployment costs lives – particularly amongst those most vulnerable groups.”