Should We Have Automatic Triggers for Unemployment Benefit Duration And How Costly Would They Be?
We model automatic trigger policies for unemployment insurance by simulating a weekly panel of individual labor market histories, grouped by state. We reach three conclusions: (i) policies designed to trigger immediately at the onset of a recession result in benefit extensions that occur in less sick labor markets than the historical average for benefit extensions; (ii) the ad hoc extensions in the 2001 and 2007-09 recessions in total cover a similar number of additional weeks as common proposals for automatic triggers, but concentrate coverage more in weaker labor markets; (iii) compared to ex post policy, the cost of common proposals for automatic triggers is close to zero.
Published Versions
Gabriel Chodorow-Reich & Peter Ganong & Jonathan Gruber, 2022. "Should We Have Automatic Triggers for Unemployment Benefit Duration and How Costly Would They Be?," AEA Papers and Proceedings, vol 112, pages 112-116. citation courtesy of