Is Austerity Responsible for the Stalled Mortality Trends Across Many High-Income Countries? A Systematic Review

Author:

Broadbent Philip1ORCID,Walsh David2,Katikireddi Srinivasa Vittal1,Gallagher Christine3,Dundas Ruth1,McCartney Gerry4

Affiliation:

1. University of Glasgow MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, Glasgow, UK

2. University of Glasgow School of Health and Wellbeing, Glasgow, UK

3. Public Health Scotland Glasgow Office, Glasgow, UK

4. University of Glasgow College of Social Sciences, Glasgow, UK

Abstract

This article systematically reviews evidence evaluating whether macroeconomic austerity policies impact mortality, reviewing high-income country data compiled through systematic searches of nine databases and gray literature using pre-specified methods (PROSPERO registration: CRD42020226609). Eligible studies were quantitatively assessed to determine austerity's impact on mortality. Two reviewers independently assessed eligibility and risk of bias using ROBINS-I. Synthesis without meta-analysis was conducted due to heterogeneity. Certainty of evidence was assessed using the GRADE framework. Of 5,720 studies screened, seven were included, with harmful effects of austerity policies demonstrated in six, and no effect in one. Consistent harmful impacts of austerity were demonstrated for all-cause mortality, life expectancy, and cause-specific mortality across studies and different austerity measures. Excess mortality was higher in countries with greater exposure to austerity. Certainty of evidence was low. Risk of bias was moderate to critical. A typical austerity dose was associated with 74,090 [−40,632, 188,792] and 115,385 [26,324, 204,446] additional deaths per year. Austerity policies are consistently associated with adverse mortality outcomes, but the magnitude of this effect remains uncertain and may depend on how austerity is implemented (e.g., balance between public spending reductions or tax rises, and distributional consequences). Policymakers should be aware of potential harmful health effects of austerity policies.

Funder

Chief Scientist Office

Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference61 articles.

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2. Office for National Statistics. 2018. Changing trends in mortality: a cross-UK comparison, 1981 to 2016.

3. Public Health England. 2018. A review of recent trends in mortality in England.

4. Recent adverse mortality trends in Scotland: comparison with other high-income countries

5. Walsh D, McCartney G. Changing mortality rates in Scotland and the UK. 2023.

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