Discussion paper

DP8025 Incentive and Insurance Effects of Tax Financed Unemployment Insurance

The potential distortions of job-search incentives caused by unemployment benefits and their financing are well known. However, a benefit-tax scheme also provides insurance having direct utility effects as well as indirect effects on risk taking. The latter mitigates or may even dominate standard incentive effects to produce a non-monotone relation between efficiency (incentives) and equity (insurance). This implies that an increase in both benefits and the tax rate up to some point may increase average income and reduce inequality, i.e., there is not necessarily a trade-off between considerations for efficiency and equity. However, optimal utilitarian policies always position the economy at a point where marginal policy changes involve a trade-off, otherwise policies would not be optimal.

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Citation

Andersen, T (2010), ‘DP8025 Incentive and Insurance Effects of Tax Financed Unemployment Insurance‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 8025. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp8025