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Title: Opportunity to Move: Macroeconomic Effects of Relocation Subsidies

Citation Type: Miscellaneous

Publication Year: 2016

Abstract: The unemployment insurance system in the U.S. does not provide incentives to look for jobs outside local labor markets. In this paper I introduce relocation subsidies as a supplement to unemployment benefits, and study their effects on unemployment, productivity and welfare. I build a job search model with heterogeneous workers and multiple locations, in which migration is impeded by moving expenses, cross-location search frictions, borrowing constraints, and utility costs. I calibrate the model to the U.S. economy, and then introduce a subsidy that reimburses a part of the moving expenses to the unemployed and is financed by labor income taxes. During the Great Recession, a relocation subsidy that pays half of the moving expenses would lower unemployment rate by 0.36 percentage points (or 4.8%) and increase productivity by 1%. Importantly, the subsidies cost nothing to the taxpayer: the additional spending on the subsidies is offset by the reduction in spending on unemployment benefits. Unemployment insurance which combines unemployment benefits with relocation subsidies appears to be more effective than the insurance based on the benefits only

Url: http://www.andrii-parkhomenko.net/files/Parkhomenko_MovingSubsidies.pdf

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Parkhomenko, Andrii

Publisher: Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona and Barcelong GSE

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Migration and Immigration

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