Working Paper

Short-Time Work and Precautionary Savings

Thomas Dengler, Britta Gehrke
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9873

In the Covid-19 crisis, most OECD countries have used short-time work (subsidized working time reductions) to preserve employment relationships. This paper studies whether short-time work can save jobs through stabilizing aggregate demand in recessions. First, we show that the consumption risk of short-time work is considerably smaller compared to unemployment using household survey data from Germany. Second, we build a New Keynesian model with incomplete asset markets and labor market frictions featuring an endogenous firing and short-time work decision. In recessions, short-time work reduces the unemployment risk of workers, which mitigates their precautionary savings motive. Using a quantitative model analysis, we show that this channel increases the stabilization potential of short-time work over the business cycle.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: short-time work, fiscal policy, incomplete asset markets, unemployment risk, matching frictions
JEL Classification: E210, E240, E320, E520, E620, J630