That displaced workers suffer long-lasting earnings losses is a stylized fact, raising the question whether these losses are replaced by other means. For married men, increased labour supply by the wife may be one way. Another possibility is that the public welfare system offsets the same losses. I used a Swedish longitudinal data set containing married couples where the husband was either employed or made redundant in 1987 by an establishment closure. There was no evidence that husbands' job loss positively affected wives' annual earnings. Although husbands' utilization of unemployment insurance increased significantly, government transfers including also sickness insurance, disability insurance, and means-tested social benefits, did not f...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wo...
I estimate the long-run income effect of welfare transfers on individual labor supply. Using Italian...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wor...
We study interdependencies in spousal labor supply and the effectiveness of intrahousehold insurance...
'This paper examines the effect of a husband's job loss on the labor supply of this wife, an effect ...
Economic theory suggests that when a primary earner within a couple loses their job, one potential ...
This study is the first to provide a causal estimate of the cross-spouse subjective well-being conse...
This article investigates the responsiveness of women’s labor supply to their husband’s job loss—the...
Government policies attempt to mitigate the economic risks to households of major life transitions. ...
Losing a job has always been understood as one of the most important causes of downward social mobil...
This paper investigates the wife’s labour supply responses to their husband’s job loss during the ec...
This article examines the "added worker effect," which is the labor supply response of wives to thei...
We consider the role of spousal labor supply as insurance against spells of unemployment. Standard t...
This paper analyses whether employment termination has an impact on marital stability. Using discret...
This paper analyses how spouses in older couples react to `shocks' or `surprises' in their partner's...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wo...
I estimate the long-run income effect of welfare transfers on individual labor supply. Using Italian...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wor...
We study interdependencies in spousal labor supply and the effectiveness of intrahousehold insurance...
'This paper examines the effect of a husband's job loss on the labor supply of this wife, an effect ...
Economic theory suggests that when a primary earner within a couple loses their job, one potential ...
This study is the first to provide a causal estimate of the cross-spouse subjective well-being conse...
This article investigates the responsiveness of women’s labor supply to their husband’s job loss—the...
Government policies attempt to mitigate the economic risks to households of major life transitions. ...
Losing a job has always been understood as one of the most important causes of downward social mobil...
This paper investigates the wife’s labour supply responses to their husband’s job loss during the ec...
This article examines the "added worker effect," which is the labor supply response of wives to thei...
We consider the role of spousal labor supply as insurance against spells of unemployment. Standard t...
This paper analyses whether employment termination has an impact on marital stability. Using discret...
This paper analyses how spouses in older couples react to `shocks' or `surprises' in their partner's...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wo...
I estimate the long-run income effect of welfare transfers on individual labor supply. Using Italian...
We estimate the earnings, hours and income effects of job loss for a representative sample of UK wor...