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Ruhr Economic Papers #1142

2025

Jonas Jessen, Robin Jessen, Andrew C. Johnston, Ewa Gałecka-Burdziak

Moral Hazard Among the Employed: Evidence from Regression Discontinuity

We exploit policy discontinuities in Poland’s unemployment insurance to examine the causal effect of changes to both benefit durations and levels. Using a regression discontinuity approach, we uncover three findings: (1) Higher benefit levels distort employment more than benefit extensions. (2) Benefit durations and levels interact: Longer durations substantially increase the distortionary effect of more generous payments. (3) Higher payments increase the transition of employed workers into unemployment. We develop a model of optimal unemployment insurance that accounts for moral hazard among both employed and unemployed workers. Notably, for level increases, distortionary costs are larger among the employed than unemployed.

ISBN: 978-3-96973-325-7

JEL-Klassifikation: H55, J20, J65

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