Working Paper

Benefit Duration, Job Search Behavior and Re-Employment

Andreas Lichter, Amelie Schiprowski
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8194

This paper studies how the potential duration of unemployment benefits affects individuals’ job search behavior and re-employment outcomes. We exploit an unexpected reform of the German unemployment insurance scheme in 2008, which increased the potential benefit duration from 12 to 15 months for recipients of age 50 to 54. Based on detailed survey data and difference-in-differences techniques, we estimate that one additional month of benefits reduces the number of filed applications by around 10% on average over the first two months of unemployment. Treatment effects on the reservation wage are positive but statistically insignificant. In a complementary analysis, we use social security data to investigate how the reform affected re-employment outcomes. The difference-in-differences estimates yield an elasticity of 0.24 (0.1) additional months in unemployment (nonemployment) per additional month of potential benefits. A cautious back-of-the-envelope calculation reveals substantial returns to early search effort.

CESifo Category
Social Protection
Labour Markets
Keywords: unemployment insurance, job search, re-employment outcomes, natural experiment
JEL Classification: D830, I380, J640, J680