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Earnings and work accident risk: a panel data analysis on mining
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, Universidad Católica del Norte, Antofagasta, Chile;2. Department of Informatics and Econometrics, Card. S. Wyszyński University, Warsaw;1. Departamento de Ingeniería de Minería, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Avda. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Santiago, Chile;2. Departamento de Geología, FCFM, Universidad de Chile, Plaza Ercilla 803, Santiago, Chile;3. Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería, Avda. Santa María 0104, Santiago, Chile;1. Faculty of Mining Engineering, Petroleum and Geophysics, Shahrood University of Technology, Shahrood, Iran;2. Senior expert at the Bureau of Design Supervision, Golgohar Mining and Industry Company, Sirjan, Iran;1. Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Silesia, ul. Będzińska 60, 41-200 Sosnowiec, Poland;2. Department of Public Management and Social Sciences, University of Economics in Katowice, ul. 1 Maja 47, 40-287 Katowice, Poland
Abstract:Mining represents one of the most hazardous work environments. Health and safety standards tend to vary across countries, depending on the state of infrastructures, technological development, and exploration and development priorities within the sector. Following an overview of hypotheses on work accident exposure and related earnings differentials, the analysis examines the rationale for testing some of these hypotheses through alternative panel data models, by eventually accounting for unobserved heterogeneity, weak exogeneity and persistence. Regressions are estimated on an unbalanced panel of 12 industrial and developing economies. Factors related to the local economy and institutional background, are found to explain varying levels of the two dependent variables across time and space. Mine fatal injury exposure appears to decline with increasing levels of development and higher private investment rates. Earnings differentials with other sectors tend to widen with a large mining sector and high rates of unemployment. The hypothesis that differentials in gross earnings in mining relative to other economic sectors are also determined by increased fatal accident risk is not substantiated by econometric estimates.
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