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Social restrictions, leisure and well-being

Social restrictions, leisure and well-being
Social restrictions, leisure and well-being
A wide-ranging public debate surrounds how pandemic lockdown measures differentially impacted individuals and which precise mechanisms – whether financial-, health-, or policy-driven – predominate in determining these effects. Using a nationally representative 24-hour diary survey covering the first two years of the pandemic, we explore potential mechanisms underlying changes in well-being. We exploit the variation in the stringency of the social restrictions implemented by the UK government during this period and use an event-study methodology to net out the impact of social restrictions from other pandemic effects. We find that well-being dropped by 47% (for men) and 71% (for women) of a standard deviation during the strictest lockdown and that it took longer to revert to pre-pandemic levels than previously estimated. This finding holds after we account for financial conditions and changes in local infection and death rates, suggesting that the time use–related changes driven by social restrictions dominate financial and health shocks in driving the overall well-being effects during the pandemic. Our detailed data on time allocation and individual preferences over the activities undertaken throughout the day suggest that the drop in well-being was primarily associated to a drastic reduction in time spent in leisure with non–household members or outside the home, a category with greater weight in the well-being of women.
0927-5371
Foliano, Francesca
a6e01d56-0beb-4305-b663-3f612b497d31
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7
Sevilla, Almudena
29b75c95-3e2b-4891-97fb-f9e9c9e46ef3
Foliano, Francesca
a6e01d56-0beb-4305-b663-3f612b497d31
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7
Sevilla, Almudena
29b75c95-3e2b-4891-97fb-f9e9c9e46ef3

Foliano, Francesca, Tonei, Valentina and Sevilla, Almudena (2023) Social restrictions, leisure and well-being. Labour Economics. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

A wide-ranging public debate surrounds how pandemic lockdown measures differentially impacted individuals and which precise mechanisms – whether financial-, health-, or policy-driven – predominate in determining these effects. Using a nationally representative 24-hour diary survey covering the first two years of the pandemic, we explore potential mechanisms underlying changes in well-being. We exploit the variation in the stringency of the social restrictions implemented by the UK government during this period and use an event-study methodology to net out the impact of social restrictions from other pandemic effects. We find that well-being dropped by 47% (for men) and 71% (for women) of a standard deviation during the strictest lockdown and that it took longer to revert to pre-pandemic levels than previously estimated. This finding holds after we account for financial conditions and changes in local infection and death rates, suggesting that the time use–related changes driven by social restrictions dominate financial and health shocks in driving the overall well-being effects during the pandemic. Our detailed data on time allocation and individual preferences over the activities undertaken throughout the day suggest that the drop in well-being was primarily associated to a drastic reduction in time spent in leisure with non–household members or outside the home, a category with greater weight in the well-being of women.

Text
Foliano, Tonei, Sevilla - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 10 December 2025.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 10 December 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485639
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485639
ISSN: 0927-5371
PURE UUID: ee49e22d-12bc-4990-bb1d-8898fb9ab844
ORCID for Valentina Tonei: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3981-4477

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Dec 2023 17:32
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:56

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Contributors

Author: Francesca Foliano
Author: Valentina Tonei ORCID iD
Author: Almudena Sevilla

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