Working Paper

Cyclical income risk in Great Britain

Konstantinos Angelopoulos, Spyridon Lazarakis, Jim Malley
CESifo, Munich, 2019

CESifo Working Paper No. 7594

This paper establishes new evidence on the cyclical behaviour of household income risk in Great Britain and assesses the role of social insurance policy in mitigating against this risk. We address these issues using the British Household Panel Survey (1991-2008) by decomposing stochastic idiosyncratic income into its transitory, persistent and fixed components. We then estimate how income risk, measured by the variance and the skewness of the probability distribution of shocks to the persistent component, varies between expansions and contractions of the aggregate economy. We first find that the volatility and left-skewness of these shocks is a-cyclical and counter-cyclical respectively. The latter implies a higher probability of receiving large negative income shocks in contractions. We also find that while social insurance (tax-benefits) policy reduces the levels of both measures of risk as well as the counter-cyclicality of the asymmetry measure, the mitigation effects work mainly via benefits.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
JEL Classification: D310, E240, J310