Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research

Many educational institutions and experts have raised the alarm on the observation that social media use is dangerous for young people’s well-being and mental health. However, existing reviews on this issue do not provide definite answers that address the problems of causality and heterog...

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Main Author: Maurizio Pugno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academia.edu Journals 2025-03-01
Series:Academia Mental Health & Well-Being
Online Access:https://www.academia.edu/128004937/Does_social_media_harm_young_people_s_well_being_A_suggestion_from_economic_research
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author Maurizio Pugno
author_facet Maurizio Pugno
author_sort Maurizio Pugno
collection DOAJ
description Many educational institutions and experts have raised the alarm on the observation that social media use is dangerous for young people’s well-being and mental health. However, existing reviews on this issue do not provide definite answers that address the problems of causality and heterogeneity in social media use. This paper selects, reviews and discusses empirical studies that more rigorously analyze causality in the field using large samples and objective data over long stretches of time, while overlooking the heterogeneity problem. These studies adopt the ‘natural experiment’ approach to study staggered access to social media across the territory. The conclusion drawn for findings across the US, the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain is that social media generally harms young people’s well-being and mental health. In discussing these studies, which belong to the economics literature, the present paper suggests a novel theoretical interpretation: social media use becomes harmful because it displaces beneficial activities aimed at achieving future and pro-social purposes which would make young people less vulnerable to addictive use of social media. Supporting evidence emerges from reviewing studies that pay attention to causality. The paper thus makes evident the need for research to integrate different methods and disciplines focused on such a complex and urgent issue.
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spelling doaj-art-b21fad7f4ea147be90a93c00c2a3ac252025-08-20T03:48:28ZengAcademia.edu JournalsAcademia Mental Health & Well-Being2997-91962025-03-012110.20935/MHealthWellB7581Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic researchMaurizio Pugno0Department of Economics and Law, University of Cassino and Southern Latium, Cassino 03034, Italy. Many educational institutions and experts have raised the alarm on the observation that social media use is dangerous for young people’s well-being and mental health. However, existing reviews on this issue do not provide definite answers that address the problems of causality and heterogeneity in social media use. This paper selects, reviews and discusses empirical studies that more rigorously analyze causality in the field using large samples and objective data over long stretches of time, while overlooking the heterogeneity problem. These studies adopt the ‘natural experiment’ approach to study staggered access to social media across the territory. The conclusion drawn for findings across the US, the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain is that social media generally harms young people’s well-being and mental health. In discussing these studies, which belong to the economics literature, the present paper suggests a novel theoretical interpretation: social media use becomes harmful because it displaces beneficial activities aimed at achieving future and pro-social purposes which would make young people less vulnerable to addictive use of social media. Supporting evidence emerges from reviewing studies that pay attention to causality. The paper thus makes evident the need for research to integrate different methods and disciplines focused on such a complex and urgent issue.https://www.academia.edu/128004937/Does_social_media_harm_young_people_s_well_being_A_suggestion_from_economic_research
spellingShingle Maurizio Pugno
Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
Academia Mental Health & Well-Being
title Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
title_full Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
title_fullStr Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
title_full_unstemmed Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
title_short Does social media harm young people’s well-being? A suggestion from economic research
title_sort does social media harm young people s well being a suggestion from economic research
url https://www.academia.edu/128004937/Does_social_media_harm_young_people_s_well_being_A_suggestion_from_economic_research
work_keys_str_mv AT mauriziopugno doessocialmediaharmyoungpeopleswellbeingasuggestionfromeconomicresearch