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A common finding of the optimal unemployment insurance literature is that the optimal replacement rate is around 50%; however, a key assumption is that UI is the only government spending activity. I show that optimal UI levels are dramatically reduced by the fact that UI is a small part of...
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Three important features of Indian labor markets enduringly coexist: rent-seeking, occupational immobility, and caste. These facts are puzzling, given theories that predict static, equilibrium social inequality without conflict. Our model explains these facts as an equilibrium outcome. Some...
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A common finding of the optimal unemployment insurance literature is that the optimal UI replacement rate is around 50%, implying that current levels in the US are close to optimal. However, a key assumption in the existing literature is that unemployment benefits are the only government...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010933807
A growing literature on substitution between social programs provides consistent evidence that changes in the generosity of one program can lead to changes in enrollment on other programs. However, this evidence has been ignored in welfare analyses of social insurance programs. I demonstrate...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010933814
A large body of theoretical and empirical research focuses on two very different rationales for government subsidies to college students: positive fiscal externalities from greater human capital accumulation and a larger income tax base, and the existence of liquidity constraints among student...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010933888