The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Opioid crisis also imposes handicap on US economy

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WASHINGTON: The scourge of the opioid crisis in the US kills 90 Americans every day, but beyond the human toll it also handicaps the US economy, taking millions of people out of the workforce, economists warn.

President Donald Trump has declared the epidemic a national emergency, as 2.4 million Americans are estimated to be addicted to opiates, the narcotics that include prescripti­on painkiller­s such as morphine, as well as heroin.

Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers estimates that in 2015 the opioid crisis cost the US economy US$504 billion, or 2.8 per cent of gross domestic product, in increased healthcare costs and lost wages, far higher than previously estimated.

More than 50,000 Americans died from a drug overdose in 2015, more than half of which were due to opiates, the CEA said in a report published November 20.

“The problem is worsening at an alarming pace, with opioidinvo­lved deaths doubling in the past 10 years and quadruplin­g in the past 16.”

And as businesses struggle to find workers to fill open positions – with the US unemployme­nt rate down to 4.1 per cent – large numbers of potential workers are being excluded from considerat­ion or are not able to work.

“The opioid epidemic affects the US economy by disabling adult workers in their most economical­ly productive years,” said Thomas Bollyky, an expert on health and economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, an influentia­l think-tank.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said last week the epidemic is contributi­ng to declining labour-force participat­ion among ‘prime-age workers’, especially men aged 25 to 54.

And Jerome Powell, who will succeed Yellen in February, ech- oed that analysis.

The labor force participat­ion rate has been below 63 per cent for more than three years, down from 67 per cent in the 1990s and into 2000, according to government data.

Some of that decline is due to the aging population, but the rate for adult men in the workforce has fallen below 72 per cent from 77 per cent in 2000.

Alan Krueger, economist at Princeton University, estimated that the increase in opioid prescripti­ons from 1999 to 2015 “could account for about 20 per cent of the observed decline in men’s labor force participat­ion during that same period, and 25 per cent of the observed decline in women’s labor force participat­ion.”

He said the decline is most notable in areas where opiates are most prescribed.

“Many factors are at work, but I think the driving force has been the US medical system and pharmaceut­ical companies,” Krueger said.

“With good intentions of relieving pain, too many doctors have been overprescr­ibing opioid medication­s.” Bollyky agreed the crisis has its origins in over-prescripti­on of the drugs, noting that in 20 years, prescripti­ons have soared by 300 per cent.

“In 2015, the amount of opioids prescribed was enough for every American to be medicated around the clock for three weeks.” But drug companies also played a role, with “aggressive and arguably deceptive marketing” on these painkiller­s, Bollyky said.

For example, laboratori­es delivered 780 million tablets in six years to West Virginia, a state of 1.8 million people whose opioid overdose death rate jumped by 17 per cent in 2015.

Beyond the impact on the labour market, the entire economy suffers from the epidemic of addiction.

Without jobs, addicts have no income and cannot consume in a country where household spending is the main driver of growth.

Many employers require drug tests, and will not hire workers with a criminal record, which many opioid addicts have, making them unemployab­le. — AFP

The opioid epidemic affects the US economy by disabling adult workers in their most economical­ly productive years. Thomas Bollyky, Council on Foreign Relations expert on health and economics

 ??  ?? The scourge of the opioid crisis in the US kills 90 Americans every day, but beyond the human toll it also handicaps the US economy, taking millions of people out of the workforce, economists warn. — Reuters photo
The scourge of the opioid crisis in the US kills 90 Americans every day, but beyond the human toll it also handicaps the US economy, taking millions of people out of the workforce, economists warn. — Reuters photo

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