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CReAM Applied Economics Online Seminar presented by Johannes Schmieder Boston University

05 October 2020, 4:00 pm–5:15 pm

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Paper title to follow

Event Information

Open to

All

Organiser

Maria Lambrianidou (CReAM Manager)

Location

Online Seminar
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Abstract: The job finding rate of Unemployment Insurance (UI) recipients declines in the initial months of unemployment and then exhibits a spike at the benefit exhaustion point. A range of theoretical explanations have been proposed, but those are hard to disentangle using data on job finding alone. To better understand the underlying mechanisms, we conducted a large text-message-based survey of unemployed workers in Germany. We surveyed 6,800 UI recipi- ents twice a week for 4 months about their job search effort. The panel structure allows us to observe how search effort evolves within individual over the unemployment spell. We provide three key facts: 1) search effort is flat early on in the UI spell, 2) search effort exhibits an increase up to UI exhaustion and a decrease thereafter, 3) UI recipients do not appear to time job start dates to coincide with the UI exhaustion point. A model of reference-dependent job search can explain these facts well, while a standard search model with unobserved hetero- geneity struggles to explain the second fact. The third fact also leaves little room for a model of storable offers to explain the spike.

Online seminar

Seminar Link (please email m.lambrianidou@ucl.ac.uk for seminar password)

 

 

 

 

 

About the Speaker

Johannes Schmieder

at Boston University

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