Axulus
Veteran Member
We measure the effect of unemployment benefit duration on employment. We exploit the variation
induced by the decision of Congress in December 2013 not to reauthorize the unprecedented benefit
extensions introduced during the Great Recession. Federal benefit extensions that ranged from 0 to
47 weeks across U.S. states at the beginning of December 2013 were abruptly cut to zero. To achieve
identification we use the fact that this policy change was exogenous to cross-sectional differences
across U.S. states and we exploit a policy discontinuity at state borders. We find that a 1% drop in
benefit duration leads to a statistically significant increase of employment by 0.0161 log points. In
levels, 1.8 million additional jobs were created in 2014 due to the benefit cut. Almost 1 million of
these jobs were filled by workers from out of the labor force who would not have participated in the
labor market had benefit extensions been reauthorized.
Full paper here:
http://c0.nrostatic.com/sites/default/files/w20884.pdf
