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Gestor bibliográfico Crisis y Salud

A fuzzy set approach to economic crisis, austerity and public health. Part I. European countries´ conformity to ideal types during the economic downturn

Titulo A fuzzy set approach to economic crisis, austerity and public health. Part I. European countries´ conformity to ideal types during the economic downturn
Autoría Saltkjel T, Ingelsrud MH, Dahl E, Halvorsen K.
Fuente Scand J Public Health. 2017 Aug;45(18_suppl):41-47. doi: 10.1177/1403494817706632.
Resumen AIMS: This is the first part of a two-part paper that takes an explorative approach to assess crisis and austerity in European countries during the Great Recession. The ultimate aim of this two-part paper is to explore the "crisis-austerity" thesis by Stuckler and Basu and assess whether it is the interplay between austerity and crisis, rather than the current economic crisis per se, that can led to deterioration in population health. In Part I of this paper we offer one way of operationalizing crisis severity and austerity. We examine countries as specific configurations of crisis and policy responses and classify European countries into "ideal types." METHODS: Cases included were 29 countries participating in the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) surveys. Based on fuzzy set methodology, we constructed two fuzzy sets, "austerity" and "severe crisis." Austerity was measured by changes in welfare generosity; severe crisis was measured by changes in gross domestic product (GDP) per capita growth. RESULTS: In the initial phase of the Great Recession, most countries faced severe crisis combined with no austerity. From 2010-2011 onward, there was a divide between countries. Some countries consistently showed signs of austerity policies (with or without severe crisis); others consistently did not. CONCLUSIONS: The fuzzy set ideal-type analysis shows that the European countries position themselves, by and large, in configurations of crisis and austerity in meaningful ways that allow us to explore the "crisis-austerity" thesis by Stuckler and Basu. This exploration is the undertaking of Part II of this paper.
URL www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28850010