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Unemployment benefits and older workers Jan C. van Ours Tilburg University & University of Melbourne. Setting the stage. International comparison of (un)employment rates by age and gender Developments over time for the Netherlands UI benefits for older workers
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Unemployment benefits and older workers Jan C. van Ours Tilburg University & University of Melbourne
Setting the stage • International comparison of (un)employment rates by age and gender • Developments over time for the Netherlands • UI benefits for older workers • Changes in entitlement & eligibility • Unemployment effects: inflow and outflow
Older workers in the Netherlands • Unemployment rates workers aged 55-64 comparable to prime age workers • Employment rates older workers substantially lower but increasing over the past decade
Should we worry? • Unemployment rates older workers low • But: • Low job separation rates • Low job finding rates • Long-term unemployment • UI benefits as retirement pathway • Unemployment could be lower • Role of unemployment benefits • Eligibility criteria • Entitlement
Labor market older workers • Improvement of employment rates: • Change in pension system from early retirement “pay as you go” to early retirement actuarially fair • Incentives for unemployed workers • Focus of this presentation • Quantitatively maybe not so important • Showing older workers are influenced by incentives
Unemployment benefits Two major changes in UI benefits in the Netherlands: • Change in entitlement: reduction of Potential Benefit Duration – not age specific • Change in eligibility: introducing search obligations – age specific
Entitlement rules - old • Several types of benefits: • Short term: 6 months • Wage dependent: up to 3.5 years • Extended: 2 – 3.5 years • Unemployed after 57.5 years • Receive UI benefits for 7.5 years – up to old age pensions • Spike in the inflow into unemployment beyond age 57.5
Entitlement rules - new • August 11, 2003 (weekend): extended benefits were abolished • Incentive to become unemployed shortly after age 57.5 disappeared • Spike after age 57.5 disappears
Eligibility criteria - old • Worked 26 out of 39 weeks prior to unemployment • Received wage at least 52 days in the 4 calendar years during the 5 years prior to unemployment • Register at the employment office • Have to accept a ‘suitable job’ • Actively search for work – but only up to the age of 57.5 • Drop in job finding rate after age 57.5
Eligibility criteria – new • Search requirement after age 57.5 was reinstalled • Drop in job finding rate at age 575. disappears
“Natural experiment” • Before – after comparison • Below – above age 57.5 • Before – below 57.5: cycle before • Before – above 57.5: cycle before + age • After – below 57.5: cycle after • After – above 57.5: cycle after + policy + age • (2-1) = age effect • (4-3) = age effect + policy effect • (4-3) – (2-1) = policy effect
Graphical analysis • Age at inflow has important effects on entitlement and eligibility rules • Policy change affect the incentives • After age 57.5: • Inflow does not go up • Outflow goes up
Graphical analysis - again • Age at inflow has important effects on entitlement and eligibility rules • Policy change affect the incentives • After age 57.5: • Inflow does not go up • Outflow goes up
Conclusions • Labor market position of older employed workers is not bad • Probability to loose their job is small • Once unemployed probability to find a job is small too. • Low unemployment rates: small inflow rate * long durations
Even for older workers incentives seem to work • It is possible to reduce inflow into unemployment and increase outflow from unemployment