The effect of unemployment insurance on unemployment rate and average duration: evidence from pooled cross-sectional time-series data
This paper empirically analyses the impact of the unemployment insurance system upon the insured unemployment rate and the average duration of unemployment. It employs a simultaneous equation framework because of possible feedback effects between the insured unemployment rate and the average duration of unemployment. Based on a pooled crosssectional time-series model (covering all the 50 states in the USA for the years 1967-88) that corrects for heteroscedasticity and autocorrelation, and the results show some support for the hypothesis that the unemployment insurance system, by providing workers with a safety net, increases both the insured unemployment rate and the duration period.
Year of publication: |
1994
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Authors: | Wunnava, Phanindra ; Mehdi, Syed Ali Raza |
Published in: |
Applied Economics Letters. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 1350-4851. - Vol. 1.1994, 7, p. 114-118
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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