Unemployment Insurance

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Unemployment Insurance Seyed Ali Madanizadeh Sharif U. of Tech. May 23, 2014 Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 1 / 35

Introduction Unemployment Insurance The European Unemployment Dilemma: Ljungqvist and Sargent 1998 Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 2 / 35

Introduction Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 3 / 35

Introduction Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 4 / 35

Introduction Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 5 / 35

Introduction Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 6 / 35

Introduction Post world war II, European welfare states: low unemployment rate After 1980s, high unemployment rates Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 7 / 35

Model There is a continuum of workers. An unemployed worker in period t chooses a search intensity s t 0 at a disutility c (s t ) increasing in s t Search may or may not generate a wage offer in the next period. With probability π (s t ), the unemployed worker receives one wage offer from the distribution F (w) = prob (w t+1 w) With probability 1 π (s t ), the worker receives no offer in period t + 1. Assume that π (s t ) [0, 1] and it s increasing in s t. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 8 / 35

Model Accepting a wage offer w t+1 means that the worker earns that wage (per unit of skill) for each period he is alive, is not laid off, and has not quit his job. The probability of being laid off at the beginning of a period is λ (0, 1). All workers are subjected to a probability of α (0, 1) of dying between periods. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 9 / 35

Model Employed and unemployed workers experience stochastic accumulation or deterioration of skills. There is a finite number of skill levels with transition probabilities from skill level h to h denoted by µ u (h, h ) and µ e (h, h ) for an unemployed and an employed worker, respectively. In the event of a layoff, the transition probability is given by µ l (h, h ) Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 10 / 35

Model A worker observes his new skill level at the beginning of a period before deciding to accept a new wage offer, choose a search intensity, or quit a job. The objective of each worker is to maximize the expected value E t β i (1 α) i y t+i i=0 where y t+i is the worker s after-tax income from employment and unemployment compensation at time t + i net of disutility of searching. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 11 / 35

Model Workers who were laid off are entitled to unemployment compensation benefits that are a function of their last earnings. Let b (I ) be the unemployment compensation to an unemployed worker whose last earnings were I. Unemployment compensation is terminated if the worker turns down a job offer with earnings that are deemed to be suitable by the government in view of the worker s past earnings. Let I g (I ) be the government-determined suitable earnings of an unemployed worker whose last earnings were I. Newborn workers and workers who have quit their previous job are not entitled to unemployment compensation. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 12 / 35

Model Both income from employment and unemployment compensation are subject to a flat income tax of τ. The government policy functions b (I ) and I g (I ) and the tax parameter τ must be set so that income taxes cover the expenditures on unemployment compensation in an equilibrium. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 13 / 35

Model Let V (w, h) be the value of the optimization problem for an employed worker with wage w and skill level h at the beginning of a period. The value associated with being unemployed and eligible for unemployment compensation benefits is given by V b (I, h), which is a function of both the unemployed worker s past earnings I andhis current skill level h. In the case of an unemployed worker who is not entitled to unemployment compensation, the corresponding value is denoted by V 0 (h) and depends only on the worker s current skill level. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 14 / 35

Model Bellman Equation for employed worker V (w, h) = max accept, reject {V 0 (h), (1 τ) wh + (1 α) β [ (1 λ) h µ l (h, h ) V (w, h ) +λ h λ u V b (wh, h ) ] Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 15 / 35

Model Bellman Equation for unemployed worker V b (I, h) = max{ c (s) s ( + (1 τ) b (I ) + (1 α) β µ u h, h ) h ( [(1 π (s)) V b I, h ) +π (s) ( w I g (I )/h V ( w, h ) df (w) + max {(1 τ) wh w <I g (I )/h accept,reject + (1 α) β[(1 λ) h µ l ( h, h ) V ( w, h ) +λ h λ u V b ( wh, h ) ], V b ( I, h ) }df (w))]} Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 16 / 35

Model Bellman Equation for unemployed worker with no unemployment benefit: ( V 0 (h) = max{ c (s) + (1 α) β µ s u h, h ) h { ( (1 π (s)) V 0 h ) + π (s) V ( w, h ) } df (w) Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 17 / 35

Solutions s b (I, h), w b (I, h) an optimal search intensity and a reservation wage of an unemployed worker with last earnings I and current skill level h, who is eligible for unemployment compensation benefits. s 0 (h), w 0 (h) an optimal search intensity and a reservation wage of an unemployed worker with last earnings I and current skill level h, who is not eligible for unemployment compensation benefits. The reservation wage of an employed worker will be the same as for an unemployed worker without benefits, w 0 (h), since anyone who quits his job is not eligible for unemployment compensation. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 18 / 35

Solution We study stationary equilibria, or steady states, for our economy. A steady state is defined in a standard way, as a set of government policy parameters, optimal policies ( s b (I, h), w b (I, h), s 0 (h), w 0 (h)), associated time-invariant employment and unemployment distributions, and total unemployment compensation payments that satisfy workers optimality conditions and the government s budget constraint. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 19 / 35

Calibration See the paper Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 20 / 35

Results Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 21 / 35

Results We contrast its steady state to that of a laissez-faire economy, in which there is no government intervention whatsoever very similar steady states We conclude that the effi ciency costs associated with the welfare system are relatively small. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 22 / 35

Results Important differences in unemployment dynamics. Welfare state economy has more dispersion in the duration of unemployment spells, as indicated by the fractions of long-term unemployed at any point in time. The percentage of currently unemployed workers with spells to date greater than or equal to 6 months (12 months) is 12.6 percent (1.3 percent) in the welfare state economy as compared to 9.8 percent (0.7 percent) in the laissez-faire economy. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 23 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 24 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 25 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 26 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities For example, the reservation wage of someone with the lowest skill level of one, but with the highest possible last earnings, is 0.93. This corresponds to a worker who once had attained a high skill level while making a wage at the top of the wage distribution. If such a worker with a high unemployment benefit happens to lose all his skills because of a prolonged period of unemployment, he will be extremely picky in terms of the wage offers he will accept. That is, before giving up his generous benefits, he wants to find a very good wage offer to compensate for his skill loss. Since such high wage offers are hard to find, this worker will also be unwilling to expend too much energy in searching for a new job. As can be seen in figure 5, the optimal search intensity of such a worker is a mere 0.06. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 27 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities Figure 5 shows also how the search intensity is lower for unemployed workers with both high benefits and high current skills that have not yet deteriorated as a result of unemployment. The 70 percent replacement ratio causes these workers to consume some leisure by reducing their search intensity. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 28 / 35

Results: reservation wages and search intensities Unemployed workers without benefits in the welfare state economy and the unemployed in the laissez-faire economy prefer to choose the maximum search intensity of one. When figure 6 is contrasted with figure 4 for the welfare state economy, the reservation wage of an unemployed worker without benefits is always less than or equal to the reservation wage of an unemployed worker with benefits, for any given skill level. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 29 / 35

Results Across the welfare state and the laissez-faire economies, there is a slight tendency for higher reservation wages in the welfare state economy. An unemployed worker without benefits in the welfare state economy takes into account the future potential benefits from the unemployment compensation program. The U-shaped pattern for reservation wages in figure 6 emerges from the depreciation and accumulation of skills. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 30 / 35

Results At the lower end of the skill spectrum, unemployed workers have less to lose in terms of skills from an extended period of unemployment. They therefore tend to choose higher reservation wages than unemployed workers with skills in the intermediate range. On the other hand, at the upper end of the skill spectrum, the potential for further skill accumulation becomes smaller and the emphasis shifts toward the search for higher wages; that is, the reservation wage curve starts to slope upward. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 31 / 35

Conclusions A welfare state with a very generous entitlement program is a virtual time bomb waiting to explode. As long as the economy is not subject to any major economic shocks, the welfare state can function well. Workers who get laid off with generous unemployment compensation can without too much trouble get back into employment at working conditions similar to those of their previous jobs. That is, the availability of good jobs for unemployed workers counteracts the adverse effects of generous unemployment compensation. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 32 / 35

Conclusions However, at the time of a large shock, generous unemployment compensation hinders the process of restructuring the economy. Laid-off workers then lack the incentives to quickly accept the transition to new jobs in which skills will once again have to be accumulated. Consequently, there can be a lengthy transition phase with long-term unemployment largely attributable to the existence of welfare programs. This causality is hard to detect from time-series data because there need not have been any changes in the welfare programs at the time of the shock. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 33 / 35

Conclusions Our analysis highlights the welfare state s vulnerability in times of economic turbulence. In the last two decades, the rapid restructuring from manufacturing to the service industry, the adoption of new information technologies, and the increasing international competition in both goods and services seem to have been major sources of economic turbulence. In the case of internationalization, national economies have found themselves forced to respond to changing economic conditions in farther away places. There seems to be no slowing of the pace of this development. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 34 / 35

Conclusions Instead, ongoing market liberalizations in countries such as China, India, and the former centrally planned economies in Eastern Europe are accentuating the need for national economies to be flexible and responsive to changing international competition. It follows that the welfare states of today would benefit from restructuring. In the design of social safety nets, it is more important than ever to incorporate incentives to work. Failure to do so threatens to sustain high and long-term unemployment and needlessly to waste human capital. Seyed Ali Madanizadeh (Sharif U. of Tech.) Unemployment Insurance May 23, 2014 35 / 35