Article de Périodique
Unemployment, drugs and attitudes among European youth (2018)
Auteur(s) :
AYLLON, S. ;
FERREIRA-BATISTA, N. N.
Année
2018
Page(s) :
236-248
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Domaine :
Alcool / Alcohol ; Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs ; Tabac / Tobacco / e-cigarette
Discipline :
EPI (Epidémiologie / Epidemiology)
Thésaurus géographique
EUROPE
Thésaurus mots-clés
JEUNE
;
CHOMAGE
;
ATTITUDE
;
ECONOMIE
;
CRISE ECONOMIQUE
;
PRODUIT ILLICITE
;
CANNABIS
;
DROGUES DE SYNTHESE
;
CONSOMMATION
;
DIFFUSION DES PRODUITS
;
TABAC
;
ALCOOL
;
PERCEPTION
;
OPINION
Note générale :
"The data used come from four Eurobarometer surveys on 'Young people and drugs', collected across Europe in four different years."
Résumé :
This paper studies changes in the patterns of drug consumption and attitudes towards drugs in relation to sky-high (youth) unemployment rates brought about by the Great Recession. Our analysis is based on data for 28 European countries that refer to young people. We find that the consumption of cannabis and 'new substances' is positively related to increasing unemployment rates. An increase of 1% in the regional unemployment rate is associated with an increase of 0.7 percentage points in the ratio of young people who state that they have consumed cannabis at some point in time. Our findings also indicate that higher unemployment may be associated with more young people perceiving that access to drugs has become more difficult, particularly access to ecstasy, cocaine and heroin. According to young Europeans, when the economy worsens, anti-drug policies should focus on the reduction of poverty and unemployment, and not on implementing tougher measures against users.
Highlights:
This paper studies changes in the patterns of drug consumption and attitudes towards drugs.
We study the consequences of sky-high unemployment rates brought about by the Great Recession.
Our analysis is based on data for 28 European countries referred to young people (15-24).
We find that the consumption of cannabis and 'new substances' is positively related to increasing unemployment.
According to young people, in bad economic times, anti-drug policy should focus on the reduction of poverty and unemployment.
Highlights:
This paper studies changes in the patterns of drug consumption and attitudes towards drugs.
We study the consequences of sky-high unemployment rates brought about by the Great Recession.
Our analysis is based on data for 28 European countries referred to young people (15-24).
We find that the consumption of cannabis and 'new substances' is positively related to increasing unemployment.
According to young people, in bad economic times, anti-drug policy should focus on the reduction of poverty and unemployment.
Affiliation :
Department of Economics & EQUALITAS, University of Girona, Spain
Historique