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While health affects many economic outcomes, its dynamics are still poorly understood. We use k-means clustering, a machine learning technique, and data from the Health and Retirement Study to identify health types during middle and old age. We identify five health types: the vigorous resilient, the fair-health resilient, the fair-health vulnerable, the frail resilient, and the frail vulnerable. They are characterized by different starting health and health and mortality trajectories. Our five health types account for 84% of the variation in health trajectories and are not explained by observable characteristics, such as age, marital status, education, gender, race, health-related behaviors, and health insurance status, but rather, by one’s past health dynamics. We also show that health types are important drivers of health and mortality heterogeneity and dynamics. Our results underscore the importance of better understanding health type formation and of modeling it appropriately to properly evaluate the effects of health on people’s decisions and the implications of policy reforms.
Authors

Research Associate University of Torino
Margherita is a Research Associate and an Associate Professor at the University of Torino.

University of Minnesota

Research Fellow University of Minnesota and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Mariacristina is an Research Fellow at the IFS and also a Professor in the Economics Department at the University of Minnesota.

PhD Scholar Northwestern University

Working Paper details
- DOI
- 10.1920/wp.ifs.2024.4224
- Publisher
- Institute for Fiscal Studies
Suggested citation
Borella, M et al. (2024). Health inequality and health types. 24/42. London: Institute for Fiscal Studies. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/health-inequality-and-health-types (accessed: 19 June 2025).
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