Title
Unemployment Insurance and Male Unemployment Duration in Canada
Author(s)
John C. Ham John Ham (University of Toronto)
Samuel A. Rea Samuel Rea (University of Toronto)
Abstract
A model of unemployment duration is estimated with weekly micro data on a sample of Canadian men during the 1975 through 1980 period. Entitlement provisions in the unemployment insurance program and demand conditions are found to have a significant impact on the probability of leaving unemployment. The probability of a worker leaving unemployment declines with duration of unemployment, holding unemployment insurance entitlement constant. When entitlement is allowed to vary, the probability of leaving first falls and then generally rises with unemployment duration as the declining entitlement induces a greater willingness to accept offers or search more intensively. These results are robust to alternative specifications of duration dependence and to allowing for person-specific unobserved heterogeneity.
Creation Date
1986-08
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
212
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp011c18df77g/1/212.pdf
File Function
Jel
D46, D49
Keyword(s)
unemployment duration, unemployment insurance, duration dependence, heterogeneity, Canada
Suppress
false
Series
1