Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is there a connection between opioid use and unemployment?
Is there a connection between opioid use and unemployment?
Apr 10, 2026 6:53 AM

For the past several years the U.S. has been undergoing an opioid epidemic.

Opioidsare drugs, whether illegal or prescription, that reduce the intensity of pain signals reaching the brain and affect those brain areas controlling emotion, which diminishes the effects of a painful stimulus. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), in 2013 there were more than249 million prescriptionsfor opioid pain medication written by healthcare providers. This is enough for every adult in America to have a bottle of pills.

In 2014, more peopledied from drug overdosesthan in any year on record, and the majority of drug overdose deaths—more than six out of ten—involved an opioid. A study of emergency rooms in the U.S. found that since 1999, the number of overdose deaths involving opioids (including prescription opioid pain relievers and heroin) nearly quadrupled. Altogether nearly half a million people died from drug overdoses in the years from 2000-2014, and 40 more Americans die every day from an opioid overdose.

Last year the Nobel-prize winning economist Angus Deaton and his wife Anne Casewrote an influential paperclaiming the problem wasn’t with the opioids but with the social and economic conditions that lead people to take the drugs. They

attributed the rising mortality to “deaths of despair” which they consider a form of suicide that “respond(s) more to prolonged economic conditions than to short-term fluctuations, and especially social dysfunctions … e with prolonged economic distress.”

But research continues to show that economic distress is not the driving force behind this epidemic.

Earlier this year I noted a study that found it was the “drug environment” rather than the economy that is the key driver in rising drug fatalities. Another, more recent, study by three economists from Princeton University has also found there is no causal connection between opioid use and unemployment.

What the researchers found was that increased use of opioids had a slight (3.8-5.2 percent) increase on employment among women. This is likely a result of pain management allowing some women to remain in or return to the workforce. For men, there was no observable relationship between opioid use and employment.

“Overall, our findings suggest that there is no simple causal relationship between economic conditions and the abuse of opioids,” say the researchers. “Therefore, while improving economic conditions in depressed areas is desirable for many reasons, it is unlikely to curb the opioid epidemic.”

There are two reasons such findings are important (assuming they are acknowledged and taken seriously). The first is they show that doubling down on government intervention in the economy won’t solve the opioid crisis. Too often, this epidemic is used as an excuse to support failed policies in the belief that we “must do something or more people will die.” But if economic factors are not driving the epidemic, then it’s callous and disgusting to use opioid overdoes to promote policies that would have no effect on these “deaths of despair.”

The second is that the opioid epidemic reveals a societal breakdown which cannot simply be attributed to economics. When we believed opioid abuse was something restricted to unemployed coal miners in Appalachia it was easier to dismiss it as a problem of economics and the solution to be more wealth redistribution. The more we recognize that the crisis transcends economic classes, though, the more we have to admit that’s it’s likely driven by a deep-rooted moral decay in society.

Knowing this drug epidemic is not primarily about economics won’t solve the problem. But it’s only by being clear-eyed and honest about what is causing the crisis that we will finally be able to save our addicted neighbors.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Praise for Acton University
Acton University has been over for almost two weeks now. A testimony to what a great experience it is can be found on a blog, A Voice in the Wilderness, by R.J. Moeller. Moeller was a student at Acton University this year and provides great insight to the experience he had. If you are curious about Acton University or even Acton Institute please read his blog post. He gives a great description about both that is very well written. ...
Health Care Roundtable
The Heartland Institute and Consumers for Health Care Choices are sponsoring Health Care Roundtables across the country. Earlier this week, Acton development associate Charles Roelofs attended a roundtable and offers this report: The event was co-sponsored by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy and Americans for Prosperity – Michigan. According to event organizers, over 100 people registered for the event. Participants included, local and national health care experts, medical and insurance representatives, current and former elected officials, and concerned citizens....
Acton Commentary: The paradox of liberty
Liberty is something we have valued for years in the United States, and the recent events that have occurred in Iran and Honduras demonstrate there are many people throughout the world who wish they were blessed to live in a country that protects and values liberty. As we get ready to celebrate the Fourth of July, Kevin Schmiesing, research fellow at the Acton Institute, writes a very mentary on liberty. Schmiesing explains the delicacy of freedom and how it can...
Virtue, Liberty, and the Message of TEA
This weekend, I had the pleasure of joining dozens of Michiganders in Grandville to protest big government and big spending. The Hudsonville TEA (Taxed Enough Already!) Party, a grassroots group of Americans concerned for the sake of liberty, put on the event immediately following the Grandville 4th of July Parade. Commemorating America’s independence, the people at the rally were treated to a recitation of the Declaration of Independence, a lesson in the history of American liberty, and the reading of...
Maybe I don’t get out enough
Last week I took Friday afternoon off and did the yard work. I’d been listening to radio broadcasts about the vote in Congress on HR 2454 – what some of us call the “cap and tax” climate bill. You know, the one none of the members had read before the vote? Yes, I know, there’s more than one bill that they haven’t read prior to voting. Yard work is good for my psyche. In two hours I can make a...
U.S. Doctoral Degree Prestige in Science, Engineering, Economics
A recent NBER working paper, “Internationalization of U.S. Doctorate Education,” takes a look at trends in doctoral degrees awarded by American institutions in the physical sciences, engineering, and economics. From the abstract, “The representation of a large number of students born outside the United States among the ranks of doctorate recipients from U.S. universities is one of the most significant transformations in U.S. graduate education and the international market for highly-trained workers in science and engineering in the last quarter...
Venezuela’s New Man Has No Old Rights
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says that “the world needs a new moral architecture.” He also has a clear idea of what that morality ought to look like. Speaking at a conference on socialism in May of this year, he said that “every factory must… produce not only briquettes, steel, and aluminum, but also, above all, the new man and woman, the new society, the socialist society.” If Chavez manages to convince enough people that socialists are a new breed of...
International Aid Closes, Effective Immediately
In a blow to international relief work, the Spring Lake-based International Aid has announced that it is ceasing operation, effective immediately. CEO Dr. Gordon Loux cited a “perfect storm” of fiscal hardship: “We have tried to turn it around and we’ve sent out a number of appeals,” he said. “But because of the West Michigan economy and because of donor fatigue of most organizations trying to raise funds, we’ve got the perfect storm.” In May, longtime CEO and president Myles...
NRO: The Divine Economy
mentary on the ing social encyclical was published on National Review Online. Here’s plete text: On Tuesday, Pope Benedict XVI will release his first social encyclical, Caritas in Veritate. The pre-release buzz from the Catholic Left on each of his two previous encyclicals has so far proven wrong each time, so the rule should be to wait and see what the pope will actually say. Each time, with previous encyclicals, we have been told that the pope is preparing to...
Preview: Pope Benedict XVI on the Market Economy and Ethics
Pope Benedict XVI’s much anticipated economics encyclical, Caritas in Veritate, is scheduled to be released early next week, according reports. For a good sense of this pope’s thinking on economics, we offer an article the then-Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger presented in 1985 at a symposium in Rome. The Acton Institute published it under the title “Market Economy and Ethics.” As indicated by the following quote, the pope believed in integrating morals into economics in order to have sound and successful economic...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved