Recent trends and reforms in unemployment benefit coverage in the EU

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Recent trends and reforms in unemployment benefit coverage in the EU European Commission Social Situation Monitor: Seminar on coverage of unemployment benefits Janine Leschke, Department of Business and Politics, Copenhagen Business School This project has received funding from the European Union s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 613256.

Introduction (I) Pre-crisis period: research on stepping stone vs dead-end function of non-standard employment (e.g. Anxo and O Reilly 2000; Erhel et al. 2010; European Commission 2009; Gash 2008; Leschke 2009; Muffels 2008); relatively little focus on the access to unemployment benefits of non-standard workers (see Grimshaw and Rubery 1997; Talós 1999; Klammer and Tillmann 2001; Eurofound 2003; Leschke 2007, 2008; Schulze Buschoff and Protsch 2008): Studies show that non-standard workers tend to be disadvantaged in access to unemployment benefits; upon access they may receive proportionately higher benefits due to the progressive nature of some of the systems (e.g. low benefit ceilings, flat-rate schemes) Comprehensive OECD indicators on net replacement rates but little emphasis on benefit coverage With flexicurity agenda, more emphasis on unemployment benefit coverage though main focus on flexibility and employability rather than social security At the national level, little deliberate attempts to improve situation of non-standard workers with regard to unemployment benefits 2

Introduction (II) Shift in focus with the crisis high unemployment among groups with short contribution histories emphasised coverage gap in unemployment benefits (e.g. Council of the European Union 2011; European Commission 2010a and 2010b; ILO 2010; OECD 2009b; Immervoll 2009 for the OECD). Examples: Europe 2020 strategy emphasising adequate social security for workers on fixed-term contracts and self-employed (Council of the European Union 2010). OECD Employment Outlook 2010: quality of part-time employment including focus on unemployment benefit coverage Numerous forms of discrimination of non-standard workers in access to unemployment benefits. Discrimination more likely in primary than secondary benefit schemes, but evident also in the latter. Lack in protection for non-standard workers of particular concern during an economic downturn At the national level, several countries improved access of non-standard workers and/or young workers to unemployment benefits during the stimulus period; some countries also opened state-subsidised short-time working schemes to new labour market groups; several cut-backs during austerity period 3

Development in unemployment and nonstandard employment over the crisis Source: Eurostat LFS data, special extracts. 4

Access criteria for unemployment benefits Benefit design features reducing access for non-standard employed: - Long contribution periods (in combination with short reference periods) - Qualifying periods calculated in days or hours rather than months - Earnings or hours thresholds Explicit and implicit disadvantages for youth: - Age-criteria for entitlement (e.g. UK, IE, IT) - Lower rates and shorter benefit duration for youth (e.g. IT, IE) - Benefit duration linked to length of contribution payments, punishing workers with shorter tenure (e.g. Austria, Bulgaria, Germany, the Netherlands) BUT: Some countries have more relaxed qualifying criteria for youth (e.g. RO, FI) 5

Unemployment benefit receipt by previous contract type (temporary vs permanent*) and developments during the crisis (% of all unemployed), EU27 Source: Eurostat LFS, special extracts. Short-term unemployed *proxy for permanent 6

Reforming unemployment benefits during the crisis (Temporary) modifications of Eligibility (qualifying conditions) Direction of change 2008-2009 2010-2014 Relaxed Finland, Latvia, Portugal, Sweden(*), Italy* Portugal, Slovenia(*), Spain* Tightened Ireland Czech Republic, Romania, Hungary, Greece, Denmark* 1, Belgium* Explicitly opened to Spain, Italy(*),France* new groups of workers Benefit level Increasing Belgium, Netherlands, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Poland, Slovenia, Ireland Lump-sum/One-off payment Greece, Italy, Spain, France* Slovenia, Czech Republic*, Italy* Belgium, Bulgaria, Slovenia 7 Source: own depiction based on European Commission 2010d, 2011a, Eurofound 2013, Missoc 2015, LABREF 2015, Leschke 2013. Spain Decreasing Ireland(*) Greece, Spain, Ireland*, Romania, Latvia, Poland, Portugal Benefit duration Increasing Finland, Romania, Latvia, Lithuania, Portugal, Spain Decreasing Ireland, Czech Republic, Poland, France, Denmark, Denmark Greece *Reform explicitly relating to youth. (*)Parts of the reform explicitly relating to youth. 1 Refers to social assistance

Reforms in unemployment benefits are complex: the example of Ireland 1. Development in Rates of Benefits An increase in 2009, followed by two decreases in a row, in 2010 and 2011: 2008-197.80 per week. 2009-204.80 per week 2010-196 per week 2011-188 per week 2012-188 per week 2013-188 per week 2014-188 per week Additional changes relating to specific young age groups: 2010: From May 2009, a rate of 100 euro per week is introduced for those under 20 years of age. 2011: 100 per week continues for those between 18 and 21 years of age, and new rate of 144 per week introduced for those aged 22 to 24 years. Change to both age limit and rate. 2014: Change to age limit. 100 per week for 18 to 24 yrs and 144 per week paid to those aged 25 and 26 yrs. 8

Case Study: Ireland 2. Duration of Benefit: Reductions were enforced in 2009 and again in 2013 2008: 390 days. Limited to 312 if less than 260 weekly contributions have been paid since first entering insurance. 2009: 312 days. Limited to 234 if less than 260 weekly contributions have been paid since first entering insurance. 2013: 234 days. Limited to 156 if less than 260 weekly contributions have been paid since first entering insurance. 3. Qualifying Period A change was implemented in 2009, which made the qualifying period far stricter In 2008, the rule was 39 weekly contributions paid AND 39 weekly contributions paid or credited during the relevant contribution year preceding the benefit year OR 26 weekly contributions paid in each of the two relevant tax years preceding the benefit year. In 2009 this was changed to: 104 weekly contributions paid AND 39 weekly contributions paid or credited during the relevant contribution year preceding the benefit year (of which 13 must be paid) OR 26 weekly contributions paid in each of the two relevant tax years preceding the benefit year. 9

Coverage with unemployment insurance or assistance benefits as share of all unemployed, adults (30-64) 2013 <20 Italy, Malta, Romania <=20<35 Bulgaria, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia >=35<50 Cyprus, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Luxembourg, Latvia, Portugal, Sweden, Slovenia, United Kingdom >=50<=65 France, Austria, Czech Republic, Spain >=65 Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Finland Source: Eurostat LFS, special extracts. Benefit duration: 1-2 months. EU27=44.7% 10

Relative benefit coverage of youth (15-24 and 25-29) as share of adults (30-64) by country, 2013 Source: Eurostat LFS, special extracts. Benefit duration: 1-2 months. 11

Interpretation of figure Access to unemployment benefits of young (15-24 yrs) and older youth (25-29 yrs) relative to adults (30-64 yrs) (adults==100) Time Periods: Pre-crisis (2007), stimulus (2008-2009) and austerity period (2010-2014, latest available data 2013) In the majority of countries, youth are considerably less likely to receive unemployment benefits than adults; large variation across countries On EU27 average: coverage about 30% of adult level for young youth and 70% of adult level for older youth Romania, Lithuania and Estonia display high relative coverage also for young youth though at relatively low overall coverage level UK and Germany: comparatively high coverage for young and older youth, illustrating that universal basic schemes as second tier schemes work relatively well, despite being means tested and not very generous Most of the countries with low relative benefit coverage of youth (ES, SE, CY, PT) have disproportionate shares of temporary workers emphasising problems in unemployment benefit design for non-standard workers No data on either Ireland or Netherland available from Eurostat input Janine to deliverable 10.1 12

Relative development in benefit coverage for youth (15-24) by country over the crisis (stimulus and austerity period), 2007=100 Source: Eurostat LFS, special extracts. Benefit duration: 1-2 months. Note: Italy not shown due to graphical limits (exponential change from minimal level. 13

Interpretation of figure Relative developments in benefit coverage over the crisis period for young youth using 2007 as a baseline. Data for 2009 (peak of the stimulus period) and 2013 (austerity period) are presented Most countries with available information saw an increase in UB coverage for youth during the first part of the crisis (the blue bars). These were most pronounced in Italy (not shown), Slovenia, Portugal, Denmark and Spain Italy, Spain and Portugal, among others, had relaxed eligibility criteria or explicitly opened their schemes to new groups of unemployed. The aggregate data does not allow to separate reform effects from characteristics of newly unemployed (e.g. more men and standard employed becoming unemployed during the crisis) Comparing 2013 (the austerity period) with 2007, positive trend only visible in a small number of countries. Most pronounced in Greece, Denmark and Italy (latter not shown) ES, PT and CY, among others, display lower access in 2013 than in 2007: problematic as very low relative coverage coupled with very high unemployment rates of youth. Both Spain and Portugal had initially reacted to this and had temporarily increased unemployment benefit coverage of youth input Janine to deliverable 10.1 14

Relative change in access to unemployment insurance and assistance benefits to 2007 in stimulus (2009) and austerity (2013) period Substantial decrease in access Substantial increase in access missing data EU27 (rel) EU27 (abs) 15-24 2009 CY GR, SE, FR, SK, ES, IE, NL, BG, 99-0.1 2013 CY, PT, CZ, PL, ES, DK, PT, SI, IT RO, DK, GR, IT EE, LT, LU, LV, MT 81-3.3 AT (2012), HU 25-29 2009 GR PL, UK, PT, CY, ES, IE, NL, BG, 100 0.1 2013 GR, SE, AT (2012) SI, IT, RO UK, PL, RO, SI, IT EE, LT, LU, MT 85-5.4 30-64 2009 LU IT, PT, BG, LV, ES, IE, NL 102 0.9 EE, LT, MT 2013 MT, RO UK, ES, IT 104 1.7 input Janine to deliverable 10.1 15

Conclusions Unemployment benefit design geared to standard workers leads to lower coverage of youth compared to adults (the same holds for women though differences with men are less pronounced) Stimulus period: youth unemployment crisis turns focus from supply-side measures to income security Improvement in access of youth and non-standard workers to UB relaxing qualifying criteria, using one-off or lump sum payments and increasing benefit levels both expansion and cuts in benefit duration Austerity period: decreasing eligibility (6 countries) and levels (7 countries) but still some expansion particularly with focus on youth Some reforms target youth directly (often with conditionality on participation in education and training) others more indirectly LFS data illustrates these trends: coverage of youth (and adults) improving during stimulus period; both young and older youth (in contrast to adults) worse off in 2013 than in 2007 on average 16

Challenges We show relative developments in access to UB within countries as some question on comparability of absolute figures as available in LFS With (aggregate) LFS data not possible to distinguish between unemployment insurance and unemployment assistance Can t disentangle compositional effects on benefit coverage and effects on coverage due to reforms to eligibility (more possibilities with the micro-data) Challenging to capture full complexity of UB using MISSOC, LABREF and existing publications. Needs detailed country-specific analysis. Short-time working item in LFS does not contain information about financial compensation (linking with item on benefit receipt while employed not succesful) 17

Choice of References European Commission. (2011). European Employment Observatory Review: Adapting Unemployment Benefits to the Economic Cycle. Brussels: European Commission DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion. Eurofound. (2013). Young People and Temporary Employment in Europe. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. Immervoll, H. (2010), Minimum-income benefits in OECD countries: policy design, effectiveness and challenges, OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers, No 100. Leschke, J. (2012) Has the economic crisis contributed to more segmentation in labour market and welfare outcomes? Working Paper 2012.02, Brussels: ETUI. Leschke, J. (2013) La crise économique a-t-elle accentué la segmentation du marché du travail et de la protection sociale? Une analyse des pays de l UE (2008-2010), Revue Française des Affaires Sociales, No. 4, Special Issue on "Emplois et statuts atypiques: quelles protections sociales? p. 10-33. Leschke, J & Finn, M. (2015) Tracing convergence in flexibility and income security for youth during the economic crisis, Paper to SASE Mini Conference Inequalities in Youth Labour market transitions, London LSE 2-4 July 2014. OECD (2010b), Detailed description of part-time work regulations and unemployment benefit schemes affecting part-time workers, supporting material for chapter 4 How good is part-time work? of the 2010 OECD Employment Outlook. Data sources Eurostat (2015) Labour Force Survey data, special extracts. LABREF (2015) LABour market REForm database, European Commission: https://webgate.ec.europa.eu/labref/public/ MISSOC (2008 2014) Comparative Tables on Social Protection, European Commission: http://www.missoc.org/missoc/informationbase/comparativetables/missocdatabase/compa rativetablesearch.jsp OECD: Benefits and Wages: OECD indicators: www.oecd.org/els/social/workincentives 18

ADDITIONAL SLIDES 19

Comparison of registered short-term unemployed in receipt of insurance or assistance by gender, 2010 (total=100) Data source: Eurostat, online database. Note: Duration of unemployment 1-2 months. Age: 15-64 years. Countries are sorted by the difference between female and male coverage rates in ascending order. 20

Unemployment benefit generosity (context) Generosity Benefit Insurance net replacement rates for single earners at 67% at initial phase of unemployment. Secondary Benefit Assistance net replacement rates at 60 months unemployment Secondary Benefit Assistance for Limited Groups Most generous (OECD, 2012) Switzerland, Portugal, Iceland, Netherlands, Bulgaria, Spain, Luxembourg, Denmark, Slovenia, Latvia, Belgium. Austria, Finland, France, Ireland, Malta, Portugal. Belgium*, Luxembourg, Sweden. Middle (OECD, 2012) Romania, Ireland, Poland, Turkey, Estonia, Austria, Germany, Slovak Republic, Sweden, Hungary, Norway, France, Italy. Germany, Spain, United Kingdom. Spain, Poland. Least generous (OECD, 2012) United Kingdom, Greece, Malta. Estonia, Greece. Lithuania Source: Benefits and Wages. Own compilation. 21

Development in short-time working* (with or without partial benefits) over the crisis period for youth and adults (% of total employment) Source: Eurostat LFS data, special extracts. *Person worked less than usual due to slack work as share of overall employment. 22

Short-time working* (with or without partial wage replacement) by age group and country, 2009 (peak) (% of total employment) $ Longstanding STWs. Newly introduced (temporary) STWs - often less generous. /No publicly supported STWs (/) or for selected sectors only 23