
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.3734754
handle: 10419/226840 , 10419/232638
Consider a union of atomistic member states, each faced with idiosyncratic business-cycle shocks. Private cross-border risk-sharing is limited, giving a role to a federal unemployment-based transfer scheme. Member states control local labor-market policies, giving rise to a trade-off between moral hazard and insurance. Calibrating the economy to a stylized European Monetary Union, we find notable welfare gains if the federal scheme's payouts take the member states' past unemployment level as a reference point. Member states' control over policies other than unemployment benefits can limit generosity during the transition phase.
labor-market policy, ddc:330, unemployment reinsurance, search and matching, E24, Unemployment reinsurance, fiscal federalism, E62, E32
labor-market policy, ddc:330, unemployment reinsurance, search and matching, E24, Unemployment reinsurance, fiscal federalism, E62, E32
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