A Welfare-to-Work (WTW) program is a mix of government expenditures on various labour market policies targeted to the unemployed ("e.g. "unemployment insurance (UI), job search monitoring (JM), social assistance (SA), wage subsidies). This paper provides a dynamic principal-agent framework suitable for analysing chief features of an optimal WTW program, such as the sequence and duration of the different policies, the dynamic pattern of payments along the unemployment spell, and the emergence of taxes/subsidies upon re-employment. The optimal program endogenously generates an absorbing policy of last resort ("social assistance") characterized by a constant lifetime payment and no active participation by the agent. Human capital depreciation ...
I develop an equilibrium matching model in which workers have preferences over con-sumption and hour...
In order to investigate the interaction between tax policy, welfare benefits, the government technol...
Di¤erent policy instruments a¤ecting the labour market do interact among each other. Hence, we propo...
A Welfare-to-Work (WTW) program is a mix of government expenditures on various labor market policies...
Some existing welfare programs (“work-first”) require participants to work in exchange for benefits....
This paper models welfare-to-work programs as contracts offered by the principal/government to unemp...
This paper introduces the possibility of a deterioration in job opportunities during unemployment in...
This paper explores the optimal interaction between the tax system and social assistance in insuring...
This paper demonstrates how economic theory can be combined with state-of-the-art empirics to make q...
The design of an optimal unemployment compensation scheme is analyzed, using a dynamic principal–ag...
Monitoring the job-search activities of unemployed workers is a common government intervention. Typi...
Preliminary draft. Do not quote or distribute without permission of the author. Many countries rely ...
This paper applies the theory of mechanism design to welfare-to-work programs. When procuring welfar...
This paper studies a model of optimal redistribution policies in which agents face unemployment ris...
Monitoring the job-search activities of unemployed workers is a common government intervention. Typi...
I develop an equilibrium matching model in which workers have preferences over con-sumption and hour...
In order to investigate the interaction between tax policy, welfare benefits, the government technol...
Di¤erent policy instruments a¤ecting the labour market do interact among each other. Hence, we propo...
A Welfare-to-Work (WTW) program is a mix of government expenditures on various labor market policies...
Some existing welfare programs (“work-first”) require participants to work in exchange for benefits....
This paper models welfare-to-work programs as contracts offered by the principal/government to unemp...
This paper introduces the possibility of a deterioration in job opportunities during unemployment in...
This paper explores the optimal interaction between the tax system and social assistance in insuring...
This paper demonstrates how economic theory can be combined with state-of-the-art empirics to make q...
The design of an optimal unemployment compensation scheme is analyzed, using a dynamic principal–ag...
Monitoring the job-search activities of unemployed workers is a common government intervention. Typi...
Preliminary draft. Do not quote or distribute without permission of the author. Many countries rely ...
This paper applies the theory of mechanism design to welfare-to-work programs. When procuring welfar...
This paper studies a model of optimal redistribution policies in which agents face unemployment ris...
Monitoring the job-search activities of unemployed workers is a common government intervention. Typi...
I develop an equilibrium matching model in which workers have preferences over con-sumption and hour...
In order to investigate the interaction between tax policy, welfare benefits, the government technol...
Di¤erent policy instruments a¤ecting the labour market do interact among each other. Hence, we propo...