The employment situation of people living with HIV: a closer look at the effects of the 2008 economic crisis
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Date
2021-09-03Author
Rodríguez Sánchez, Beatriz
Peña Longobardo, Luz María
Oliva Moreno, Juan
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This study aims to assess the determinants of employment probabilities among people living with Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV) during a 15-year period (2001–2016) in Spain, focusing on the possible effects of occurrences such as the 2008
economic crisis. The probability of people living with HIV having a job was evaluated by applying several multivariate probit
regression models. Differences between the employment status of people living with HIV and that of the general population
were evaluated by applying genetic matching regression models. With respect to the former evaluation, for people living with
HIV, the period before the crisis (2001–2007) was associated with a probability of being employed that was 2.43 percentage
points (p.p.) higher than during the crisis, and the period after the crisis (2014–2016) with a probability that was 7.58 p.p.
lower than during the crisis. Greater effects were also observed among males, the probability of being in employment before
the economic crisis being higher (by 2.26 p.p.) and lower after the crisis (− 3.41 p.p.) than among women, and among those
infected through drug use (6.18 p.p. and − 7.34 p.p. before and after the crisis, respectively), than among those infected
through sex. When analysing the differences with respect to the general population, people living with HIV reported lower
probabilities of being employed: by − 18 p.p. before the crisis, by − 15 p.p. during the crisis (years 2008–2013) and by − 10
p.p. after the crisis, implying a convergence in the prospects of employment with the passage of the years. Those differences
were greater for people of basic educational level (− 23 to − 16 p.p.), a weaker immune system (− 34 p.p. to − 21 p.p.) and
those infected through the use of drugs (− 31 p.p. to − 26 p.p.). Although the results suggest that the economic crisis had a
greater effect on the employment prospects of people living with HIV, and that effect is still felt by that group, our findings
also point towards a convergence of their employment prospects with those of the general population, over the 15-year period
assessed. An analysis of the employment situation of people living with HIV might have helped when designing job-seeking
methods and policies on the working environment, especially through the 15-year period considered, when the economic
crisis had a greater effect on the job market.