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Does the economy affect teenage substance use?
This
research examines how teenage drug and alcohol use responds to changes in the
economy. In contrast to the recent literature confirming pro-cyclical alcohol
use among adults, this research offers strong evidence that a weaker economy
leads to greater teenage marijuana and hard-drug use and some evidence that a
weaker economy also leads to higher teenage alcohol use. The findings are based
on logistic models with state and year fixed effects, using teenagers from the
NLSY-1997. The evidence also indicates that teenagers are more likely to sell
drugs in weaker economies. This suggests one mechanism for counter-cyclical
drug use - that access to illicit drugs is easier when the economy is weaker.
These results also suggest that the strengthening economy in the 1990s
mitigated what would otherwise have been much larger increases in teenage drug
use.
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