Following the global financial crisis, the incumbent Labor government introduced policies that reduced the job search requirements for people on unemployment benefits. As a result, there are now around 350,000 people receiving unemployment benefits who are classified as ‘non-jobseekers’, meaning that they are not required to look for work.People on welfare who are not required to look for work will stay on welfare for longer. Furthermore, because people who would otherwise be looking for work are no longer doing so, the government policy change likely had an impact on the unemployment rate in the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis. The rise of non-jobseekers on unemployment benefits provides a partial explanation fo...
Are jobless persons who want work but are not actively searching, unemployed or out of the labour fo...
Using variations in UI policies over time and across U.S. states, this paper provides evidence that ...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "The welfare an...
In the wake of the Great Recession, with more Americans unemployed than at any other time in the las...
In the wake of the Great Recession, with more Americans unem-ployed than at any other time in the la...
New evidence suggests that non-searching unemployed people are significantly less satisfied with the...
Unemployment Insurance (UI) is one the nation’s most effective anti-poverty and economic stabilizati...
Over the past several decades, the rate at which regular unemployment insurance recipients run out o...
Throughout the 1980s, the British unemployment compensation system was subject to a series of admini...
Benefit eligibility requirements intend to incentivize the unemployed to find work more quickly. Our...
In the labor markets, there exist simultaneously both, unemployed workers and vacant jobs. Due to th...
Contrary to assumptions in the unemployment insurance (UI) literature, this paper argues that unempl...
Countries with unemployment insurance (UI) program can effectively conduct a labor market policy and...
Economists often expect unemployment insurance (UI) benefits to elevate unemployment rates because r...
In 1996 the UK made major changes to its welfare system for the support of the unemployed with the i...
Are jobless persons who want work but are not actively searching, unemployed or out of the labour fo...
Using variations in UI policies over time and across U.S. states, this paper provides evidence that ...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "The welfare an...
In the wake of the Great Recession, with more Americans unemployed than at any other time in the las...
In the wake of the Great Recession, with more Americans unem-ployed than at any other time in the la...
New evidence suggests that non-searching unemployed people are significantly less satisfied with the...
Unemployment Insurance (UI) is one the nation’s most effective anti-poverty and economic stabilizati...
Over the past several decades, the rate at which regular unemployment insurance recipients run out o...
Throughout the 1980s, the British unemployment compensation system was subject to a series of admini...
Benefit eligibility requirements intend to incentivize the unemployed to find work more quickly. Our...
In the labor markets, there exist simultaneously both, unemployed workers and vacant jobs. Due to th...
Contrary to assumptions in the unemployment insurance (UI) literature, this paper argues that unempl...
Countries with unemployment insurance (UI) program can effectively conduct a labor market policy and...
Economists often expect unemployment insurance (UI) benefits to elevate unemployment rates because r...
In 1996 the UK made major changes to its welfare system for the support of the unemployed with the i...
Are jobless persons who want work but are not actively searching, unemployed or out of the labour fo...
Using variations in UI policies over time and across U.S. states, this paper provides evidence that ...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "The welfare an...