Optimal unemployment insurance when income effects are large
Optimal unemployment insurance when income effects are large
12 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Studies of the consumption-smoothing benefits of unemployment insurance (UI) have found that the optimal benefit level is very small, perhaps even 0, for conventional levels of risk aversion. In this paper, I derive a formula for the optimal benefit rate in terms of income and price elasticities of unemployment durations, directly inferring risk aversion for the unemployed from their behavioral responses to UI benefits. The optimal rate of social insurance is shown to depend positively on the size of the income elasticity and negatively on the size of the substitution elasticity. I estimate these elasticities using semi-parametric hazard models and variation in UI laws across states and over time. The estimates indicate that income effects account for 70% of the effect of UI on unemployment durations, and yield an optimal replacement rate around 50% of pre-unemployment wages. These results challenge the prevailing view that social safety nets provide minimal welfare gains at a large efficiency cost"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Raj Chetty
A bound on risk aversion using
A bound on risk aversion using labor supply elasticities
A general formula for the opti
A general formula for the optimal level of social insurance
A new method of estimating ris
A new method of estimating risk aversion
Adjustment costs, firm respons
Adjustment costs, firm responses, and labor supply elasticities
An agency theory of dividend t
An agency theory of dividend taxation
Bounds on elasticities with op
Bounds on elasticities with optimization frictions