Publication | Open Access
Unemployment Insurance and Means-Tested Program Interactions: Evidence from Administrative Data
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Citations
19
References
2020
Year
Health Insurance DesignIncome SecurityLabor Market ParticipationFinancial ProtectionPolicy AnalysisUnemployment InsuranceProgram EvaluationSocial Security SystemEconomic AnalysisSocial InsuranceInsurance RegulationsPublic HealthEconomic InequalityInsuranceStatisticsHealth Insurance ReformEconomicsPublic PolicyLabor Market OutcomeUi ReceiptUi EligibilityBusinessLabor Market ImpactSocial Safety NetSocial PolicyUnemployment
We study the ways in which unemployment insurance (UI) benefits interact with other elements of the social safety net around job losses. We exploit a cutoff for UI eligibility, based on a workers’ highest quarterly earnings in the past year, to generate quasi-experimental variation in UI receipt. We find that UI receipt cuts welfare (TANF) receipt by half among low-earning UI applicants but has no impact on SNAP or Medicaid usage. However, because welfare participation is low in this population, overall crowdout is small. In the quarter following layoff, UI increases total income by 55 percent (including labor earnings and transfers) (JEL E24, H53, I18, I38, J64, J65).
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