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Unemployment Risk and Discretionary Fiscal Spending

Alex Grimaud

Department of Economics Working Papers from Vienna University of Economics and Business, Department of Economics

Abstract: This paper studies the effects of discretionary fiscal policy responses to adverse aggregate shocks. For this, I build a tractable model where households face idiosyncratic unemployment risk in a Search-and-Matching (SaM) labor market with explicit intensive and extensive employment margins. Focusing on the spending side of fiscal stimuli, I investigate transitory increases in Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits and public purchases. I show that the effects of transitory increases in fiscal spending largely depend on the state of the labor market and the type of adverse shock hitting the economy. At the aggregate level, the most welfare-improving fiscal stimuli appear to be rather small and over a long period. At the idiosyncratic level, welfare improvements are very unequally distributed. Front-loaded increases in fiscal spending may run into supply constraints and have important undesirable consequences. Fiscal stimuli through UI transfers are never Pareto efficient whereas fiscal stimuli through public purchases can be.

Keywords: Search and matching; heterogeneous agents; UI transfers; unemployment risk; and fiscal spending (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E21 E24 E32 E62 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-02
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge and nep-lab
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