Working paper JAN 2015
Voluntary Public Unemployment Insurance
Authors:
- Donald O. Parsons
- Torben Tranæs
- Helene Bie Lilleør
The Elderly
Labour Market
The Social Sector
The Elderly, Labour Market, The Social Sector
Denmark has drawn much attention for its active labor market policies, but is almost unique in offering a voluntary public unemployment insurance program requiring a significant premium payment. A safety net program – a less generous, means-tested social assistance plan – completes the system. The voluntary system emerged as one of many European “Ghent systems,” essentially
government subsidized trade union plans, but has since lost many key features
of such plans. We assess system performance using a 10% sample of the Danish population drawn from administrative data. Coverage rates for the voluntary programs are surprisingly high, approximately 80 percent of the workforce, but
the program has predictable selection effects, including adverse selection across risk classes and a substantial charity hazard (low coverage among those with generous treatment under the safety net program). The latter appears to explain the difficulty of shifting to a compulsory system; redistribution effects would be concentrated among the previously uninsured in the lowest decile of the income distribution, a problem in the Danish welfare state.
government subsidized trade union plans, but has since lost many key features
of such plans. We assess system performance using a 10% sample of the Danish population drawn from administrative data. Coverage rates for the voluntary programs are surprisingly high, approximately 80 percent of the workforce, but
the program has predictable selection effects, including adverse selection across risk classes and a substantial charity hazard (low coverage among those with generous treatment under the safety net program). The latter appears to explain the difficulty of shifting to a compulsory system; redistribution effects would be concentrated among the previously uninsured in the lowest decile of the income distribution, a problem in the Danish welfare state.
Authors
About this publication
Publisher
IZA. Institute for the Study of Labor / Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit