Unemployment Insurance versus Minimum Income – Effects on Working Behavior over the Life-cycle (joint with Victoria Prowse, Oxford University)ISER Internal Seminars

In this paper we develop a dynamic structural life-cycle model of labor supply behavior which accounts for endogenous accumulation of human
capital and for the effect of the tax and transfer system on work incentives. In addition to income tax, social security contributions
and social assistance, we model unemployment insurance benefits which are endogenous with respect to life-cycle employment. Specifically, an
individual’s recent employment history determines the duration of eligibility to unemployment insurance benefits while the level of these
benefits is tied to previous earnings. We use this framework to study the life-cycle employment effects of transforming a traditional welfare
state, as is currently in place in Germany, towards a more Anglo-American system in which the period of entitlement to unemployment insurance payments is reduced and payments do not depend on previous earnings.

Presented by:

Peter Haan, German Institute for Economic Research, DIW Berlin

Date & time:

July 15, 2009 12:00 pm - July 15, 2009 1:00 pm


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