Unemployment insurance in transition and developing countries: Moral hazard vs. liquidity constraints in Chile
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2022Metadata
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Sehnbruch, Kirsten
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Unemployment insurance in transition and developing countries: Moral hazard vs. liquidity constraints in Chile
Abstract
One of the most complex policy issues that developing countries will face as a result of the
employment crisis caused by the Covid crisis is the question of how they can better protect the unemployed.
However, the analysis of unemployment insurance (UI) in developing economies with large informal sectors
is in its infancy, with few papers providing solid empirical evidence. This paper therefore makes several contributions:
first, it applies Chetty’s 2008 landmark work on UI to a transition economy (Chile) and shows
that the moral hazard effects expected by policy makers, who designed the system are minimal, while liquidity
effects were entirely neglected. Second, it demonstrates that it is not enough merely to quantify effects
such as moral hazard, but to understand their causes as unemployment generated by moral hazard or liquidity
constraints has different welfare implications and should therefore result in different policies. By means of
an RDD, this paper analyses the Chilean UI system using a large sample of administrative data, which
allows for an extremely precise analysis of how the system works, thus providing invaluable empirical lessons
for other countries.
Patrocinador
British Academy Global Professorship Programme GP1n100170
Centre for Social Conflict and Cohesion (COES, ANID/Fondap) 15130009
European Research Council (ERC) 75446
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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The Journal of Development Studies, 2022 Vol. 58, No. 10, 2089–2109
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