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The Effects of Extended Unemployment Insurance over the Business Cycle Evidence from Regression Discontinuity Estimates Over Twenty Years
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Year: 2012 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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The Long-Term Effects of Unemployment Insurance Extensions on Employment
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Year: 2012 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Causal Effect of Unemployment Duration on Wages : Evidence from Unemployment Insurance Extensions
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Year: 2013 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Effects of Unemployment Insurance Benefits : New Evidence and Interpretation
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Year: 2016 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Costs of Job Displacement over the Business Cycle and Its Sources
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Year: 2022 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Digital
The Rise of Domestic Outsourcing and the Evolution of the German Wage Structure
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Year: 2015 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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The nature of the relationship between employers and employees has been changing over the last decades, with firms increasingly relying on contractors, temp agencies and franchises rather than hiring employees directly. We investigate the impact of this transformation on the wage structure by following jobs that are moved outside of the boundary of lead employers to contracting firms. For this end we develop a new method for identifying outsourcing of food, cleaning, security and logistics services in administrative data using the universe of social security records in Germany. We document a dramatic growth of domestic outsourcing in Germany since the early 1990s. Event-study analyses show that wages in outsourced jobs fall by approximately 10-15% relative to similar jobs that are not outsourced. We find evidence that the wage losses associated with outsourcing stem from a loss of firm-specific rents, suggesting that labor cost savings are an important reason why firms choose to contract out these services. Finally, we tie the increase in outsourcing activity to broader changes in the German wage structure, in particular showing that outsourcing of cleaning, security and logistics services alone accounts for around 10 percent of the increase in German wage inequality since the 1980s.


Digital
Fetal exposure to toxic releases and infant health
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. NBER

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Fetal exposure to toxic releases and infant health.
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Cambridge National Bureau Of Economic Research.

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Digital
Does the Use of Worker Flows Improve the Analysis of Establishment Turnover? Evidence from German Administrative Data
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Year: 2013 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Administrative datasets provide an excellent source for detailed analysis of establishment entries and exits on a fine and disaggregate level. However, administrative datasets are not without problems: restructuring and relabeling of firms is often poorly measured and can create large biases. Information on worker flows between establishments can potentially alleviate these measurement issues, but it is typically hard to judge how well correction algorithms based on this methodology work. This paper evaluates the use of the worker flow methodology using a dataset from Germany, the Establishment History Panel. We first document the extent of misclassification that stems from relying solely on the first and last appearance of the establishment identifier (EID) to identify openings and closings: Only about 35 to 40 percent of new and disappearing EIDs with more than 3 employees are likely to correspond to real establishment entries and exits. We provide 3 pieces of evidence that using a classification system based on worker flows is superior to using EIDs only: First, establishment birth years generated using the worker flow methodology are much higher correlated with establishment birth years from an independent survey. Second, establishment entries and exits which are identified using the worker flow methodology move closely with the business cycle, while events which are identified as simple ID changes are not. Third, new establishment entries are small and show rapid growth, unlike new EIDs that correspond to ID changes.


Digital
The Effects of Unemployment Insurance Benefits : New Evidence and Interpretation
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Year: 2016 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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The Great Recession has renewed interest in Unemployment Insurance (UI) programs around the world. At the same time, there have been important advances in both theory and measurement of UI. In this paper, we first use the theory to present a unified treatment of the welfare effects of UI benefit levels and durations and derive convenient expressions of the disincentive effect of UI. We then discuss recent estimates of the effect of UI benefit levels and durations on labor supply based, to a large extent, on high-quality research designs and administrative data. We relate these estimates directly to the sufficient statistics identified by the model. We also discuss several active and open areas of research on UI. These include the effect of UI on aggregate labor market outcomes, the effect of UI on job outcomes, the long-term effects of UI, the effects of UI under non-standard behavioral assumptions, and the interactions of UI with other programs. While our review of the new experimental estimates confirms the range of negative labor supply effects of the previous literature, we show based on the model that these estimates are imperfect proxies for the actual disincentive effects. We also isolate several important areas in need for additional research, including estimates of the social value of UI as well as the effects of UI in less-developed countries.

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