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Dive into the research topics where Silvia Mendolia is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvia Mendolia.


Social Science & Medicine | 2014

The effect of chronic pain on life satisfaction: Evidence from Australian data

Paul McNamee; Silvia Mendolia

Chronic pain is associated with significant costs to individuals directly affected by this condition, their families, the healthcare system, and the society as a whole. This paper investigates the relationship between chronic pain and life satisfaction using a sample of around 90,000 observations from the first ten waves of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics of Australia Survey (HILDA), which is a representative survey of the Australian population that started in 2000. We estimate the negative impact on life satisfaction and examine the persistence of the effect over multiple years. Chronic pain is associated with poor health conditions, disability, decreased participation in the labour market and lower quality of life. We calculate the compensating income variation of chronic pain, based on the measurement of chronic pain, the life satisfaction of individuals and the income of households. Panel data models with random and fixed effects are used to control for characteristics of individuals that do not vary over time. Further, we investigate whether individuals who experience chronic pain exhibit adaptation and recovery in life satisfaction after 3 years. Overall, we find that chronic pain has a large negative association with life satisfaction, and that the compensating income variation is substantial (around 640 US


Health Economics | 2014

THE EFFECT OF NONCOGNITIVE TRAITS ON HEALTH BEHAVIOURS IN ADOLESCENCE

Silvia Mendolia; Ian Walker

per day).


Economic Record | 2016

New Estimates of Intergenerational Mobility in Australia

Silvia Mendolia; Peter Siminski

This paper investigates the relationship between personality traits and health behaviours in adolescence using a large and recent cohort study. In particular, we investigate the impact of locus of control, self-esteem and work ethics at ages 15-16 years on the incidence of health behaviours such as alcohol consumption, cannabis and other drug use, unprotected and early sexual activity and sports and physical activity. We use matching methods to control for a very rich set of adolescent and family characteristics, and we find that personality traits do affect health behaviours. In particular, individuals with external locus of control, low self-esteem or with low levels of work ethics seem more likely in engage in risky health behaviours.


Applied Economics | 2017

National pro-poor spending programmes and their effect on income inequality and poverty: Evidence from Vietnam

Phuc Van Phan; Martin O’Brien; Silvia Mendolia; Alfredo R. Paloyo

We present new estimates of intergenerational earnings elasticity for Australia. We closely follow the methodology used by Leigh (2007), but use considerably more data (twelve waves of HILDA and four waves of PSID). Our adjusted estimates are intended to be comparable to those for other countries in Corak (2013). Our preferred estimate (0.35) is considerably higher than implied by Leigh’s study, and is less subject to sampling variation. In an international context, intergenerational mobility in Australia is not particularly high, and is consistent with its relatively high level of cross-sectional inequality.


Economic Record | 2016

Ethnic Diversity and Trust: New Evidence from Australian Data

Silvia Mendolia; Alex Tosh; Oleg Yerokhin

ABSTRACT This article examines the causal effects of the national (pro-poor) targeted programmes (NTPs) on both poverty incidence and inequality in Vietnam over the period 2002–2010. While the links between NTPs and poverty alleviation and income inequality have previously been analysed independently, this study is the first to offer a comprehensive analysis of NTPs expenditure on poverty and inequality simultaneously. Applying the system generalized method of moments estimator to a panel of Vietnamese regional data, we are unable to establish that NTPs have significantly mitigated poverty incidence. However, we estimate that NTPs have significantly increased inequality. We offer possible explanations why the NTPs have resulted in these unintended outcomes and discuss potential policies which can reduce both poverty and inequality.


Applied Economics | 2018

Changes in health-related quality of life: a compensating income variation approach

Paul McNamee; Silvia Mendolia

This paper investigates the relationship between neighbourhood ethnic and linguistic heterogeneity and the formation of an individuals local and general trust. A wide literature across economics and sociology has recognised the importance of trust in facilitating economic growth and development and it is therefore important to investigate elements of social organisation that encourage or inhibit the development of trust. We use fixed effects and instrumental variable regression and control for a wide set of individual and local area characteristics to identify the effect of heterogeneity on trust formation. Our results show that increasing neighbourhood ethnic and linguistic fractionalisation is associated with a decrease in local trust of about 12% of a standard deviation in the model with fixed effects, while we do not find any significant relationship between neighbourhood heterogeneity and general trust.


Journal of Population Economics | 2012

The impact of job loss on family dissolution

Denise Doiron; Silvia Mendolia

ABSTRACT This paper investigates the relationship between negative changes in health and life satisfaction, using a sample from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics of Australia Survey. We use panel data models and estimate the life satisfaction impact of several different changes in health status to calculate the Compensating Income Variation (CIV) of them. Our work innovates with respect to the existing literature by using a more robust CIV method that takes account of the potential measurement error in income. Further, we produce the first set of monetary values for health losses using SF-6D utility values, one of the main measures used to estimate and value health change for economic evaluation. We show that negative changes in SF-6D are significantly associated with a reduction in life satisfaction, and the starting point matters: a drop of 0.1 in SF-6D score is associated with a decrease of 0.12 points in life satisfaction if the starting utility value is 0.8, but the effect is 100% higher if the SF-6D starting point is 0.7. More generally, we find that a 0.1 deterioration in SF-6D has a strong association with life satisfaction and that the CIV value is substantial (over US


Economics of Education Review | 2013

The impact of pre-school on adolescents' outcomes: Evidence from a recent English cohort

Patricia Apps; Silvia Mendolia; Ian Walker

120,000).


Review of Economics of the Household | 2014

The impact of husband’s job loss on partners’ mental health

Silvia Mendolia


Economics of Education Review | 2014

The effect of personality traits on subject choice and performance in high school: Evidence from an English cohort

Silvia Mendolia; Ian Walker

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Oleg Yerokhin

University of Wollongong

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Peter Siminski

University of Wollongong

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Alfiah Hasanah

University of Wollongong

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Alex Tosh

University of Wollongong

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