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Working Paper

Layoff Taxes, Unemployment Insurance, and Business Cycle Fluctuations

Kiel Working Papers, 1988

Authors

  • Ahrens
  • S.
  • Nejati
  • N.
  • Pfeiffer
  • P.L.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

E24 J64 J65

Key Words

Beveridge curve

experience rating

search and matching

unemployment insurance

Related Topics

Business Cycle

Business Cycle World

Fiscal Policy & National Budgets

Labor Market

Welfare State

This paper studies the role of labor market institutions in business cycle fluctuations. We develop a DSGE model with search and matching frictions and incorporate a US unemployment insurance experience rating system.

Layoff taxes based on experience rating finance the cost of unemployment benefits and create considerable employment adjustment costs. Our framework helps realign the search and matching model with the empirical properties of its most salient variables. The model reproduces the negative correlation between vacancies and unemployment, i.e., the Beveridge curve. Simulations show that the model generates more cyclical volatility in its key variable - the ratio of job vacancies to unemployment (labor market tightness). Moreover, layoff taxes reduce the excess sensitivity of job destruction found in Krause and Lubik (2007) and strengthen the negative correlation of job creation and job destruction. Thus, the model matches key labor market data while incorporating an important feature of the US labor market.

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