Marco Caliendo
;
Konstantinos Tatsiramos
;
Arne Uhlendorff
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benefit duration, unemployment duration and job match quality: a regression-discontinuity approach (replication data)

We use a sharp discontinuity in the maximum duration of benefit entitlement to identify the effect of extended benefit duration on unemployment duration and post-unemployment outcomes (employment stability and re-employment wages). We address dynamic selection, which may arise even under an initially random assignment to treatment, estimating a bivariate discrete-time hazard model jointly with a wage equation and correlated unobservables. Owing to the non-stationarity of job search behavior, we find heterogeneous effects of extended benefit duration on the re-employment hazard and on job match quality. Our results suggest that the unemployed who find a job close to and after benefit exhaustion experience less stable employment patterns and receive lower re-employment wages compared to their counterparts who receive extended benefits and exit unemployment in the same period. These results are found to be significant for men but not for women.

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Suggested Citation

Caliendo, Marco; Tatsiramos, Konstantinos; Uhlendorff, Arne (2013): BENEFIT DURATION, UNEMPLOYMENT DURATION AND JOB MATCH QUALITY: A REGRESSION-DISCONTINUITY APPROACH (replication data). Version: 1. Journal of Applied Econometrics. Dataset. https://journaldata.zbw.eu/dataset/benefit-duration-unemployment-duration-and-job-match-quality-a-regressiondiscontinuity-approach?activity_id=0bef4055-0012-4e84-b49f-2a8200b6b84a