nep-ias New Economics Papers
on Insurance Economics
Issue of 2013‒10‒05
three papers chosen by
Soumitra K Mallick
Indian Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management

  1. Market Externalities of Large Unemployment Insurance Extension Programs By Rafael Lalive; Camille Landais; Josef Zweimüller
  2. Mental Illness and Unhappiness By Layard, Richard; Chisholm, Dan; Patel, Vikram; Saxena, Shekhar
  3. Utilization of Dental Services Among Medicaid-Enrolled Children. By Ellen Bouchery

  1. By: Rafael Lalive; Camille Landais; Josef Zweimüller
    Abstract: This paper offers quasi experimental evidence of the existence of spillover effects of UI extensions using a unique program that extended unemployment benefits drastically for a subset of workers in selected regions of Austria. We use non-eligible unemployed in treated regions, and a difference-in-difference identification strategy to control for preexisting differences across treated and untreated regions. We uncover the presence of important spillover effects: in treated regions, as the search effort of treated workers plummets, the job finding probability of untreated workers increases, and their average unemployment duration and probability of long term unemployment decrease. These effects are the largest when the program intensity reaches its highest level, then decrease and disappear as the program is scaled down and finally interrupted. We use this evidence to assess the relevance of different assumptions on technology and the wage setting process in equilibrium search and matching models and discuss the policy implications of our results for the EUC extensions in the US.
    Keywords: unemployment insurance; benefit extension; market externality; macro effects
    JEL: J65 J21 J22
    Date: 2013–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lau:crdeep:13.15&r=ias
  2. By: Layard, Richard (London School of Economics); Chisholm, Dan (World Health Organization); Patel, Vikram (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine); Saxena, Shekhar (World Health Organization)
    Abstract: This paper is a contribution to the second World Happiness Report. It makes five main points. 1. Mental health is the biggest single predictor of life-satisfaction. This is so in the UK, Germany and Australia even if mental health is included with a six-year lag. It explains more of the variance of life-satisfaction in the population of a country than physical health does, and much more than unemployment and income do. Income explains 1% of the variance of life-satisfaction or less. 2. Much the most common forms of mental illness are depression and anxiety disorders. Rigorously defined, these affect about 10% of all the world’s population – and prevalence is similar in rich and poor countries. 3. Depression and anxiety are more common during working age than in later life. They account for a high proportion of disability and impose major economic costs and financial losses to governments worldwide. 4. Yet even in rich countries, under a third of people with diagnosable mental illness are in treatment. 5. Cost-effective treatments exist, with recovery rates of 50% or more. In rich countries treatment is likely to have no net cost to the Exchequer due to savings on welfare benefits and lost taxes. But even in poor countries a reasonable level of coverage could be obtained at a cost of under $2 per head of population per year.
    Keywords: mental illness, welfare benefits, healthcare costs, life-satisfaction
    JEL: I10 I14 I18
    Date: 2013–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp7620&r=ias
  3. By: Ellen Bouchery
    Keywords: Dentistry, Dental Care, Medicaid, Pediatrics
    JEL: I
    Date: 2013–09–30
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:mpr:mprres:7898&r=ias

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