Young adults who experienced annual income drops of 25 per cent or more might be more at risk of having thinking problems and reduced brain health in middle age a study said. Our exploratory study followed participants in the US through the recession in the late 2000s when many people experienced economic instability said the study's lead author Leslie Grasset from the Inserm Research Centre in France. Our results provide evidence that higher income volatility and more income drops during peak earning years are linked to unhealthy brain ageing in middle age Grasset said. The study published in the journal