Search
Close this search box.

Taub Center Annual Report: Chareidim are Poorer but Generally in Better Health


charThe Taub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel has released its 2015 “State of the Nation Report”, a comprehensive report addressing various aspects of the social and economic fibers that make up Israel. In the chapter entitled The Relationship Between Social Capital and Health in the Haredi Sector, the report cites that generally speaking, while chareidim are poorer than other sectors, they are in better health, attributing to the social interaction, shul and family life.

Following is a portion of the report:

This chapter seeks to identify the possible reasons for the relatively good health status of Haredim (ultra-Orthodox Jews) in Israel. A comparison between Israeli cities shows that those cities characterized by large concentrations of Haredim also enjoy higher life expectancies than their socioeconomic rankings would predict. Moreover, a Central Bureau of Statistics survey found a substantially higher percentage of self-reported “very good” health status among Haredim than among other sectors. The chapter maintains that these data may be related to accepted parameters of social capital, that is, to attributes common among the Haredi sector that have a beneficial impact on individual and societal functioning. Some of these attributes are religious in nature, such as prayer and a faith-informed outlook on life, while others characterize Haredi society, i.e., close relationships with family and friends and a high degree of community involvement (as expressed through volunteering, for example). These hypotheses were examined in the chapter using regressions that test the influence of different factors on self-reported health status. It was found that religious observance has a significantly positive effect on the probability that a subject will report “very good” health status.

This paper appears as a chapter in the Center’s annual publication, State of the Nation Report 2015, Avi Weiss and Dov Chernichovsky (editors).

(YWN – Israel Desk, Jerusalem)



One Response

Leave a Reply


Popular Posts