11 research outputs found

    Welfare benefits and the rate of unemployment: some evidence from the European Union in the last thirty years

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    Our objective in this paper is to re-examine the hypothesis that welfare benefits may be responsi-ble for the observed differences in cross- country unemployment rates and test its validity by using panel data from 19 countries over the 1970-2000 period. For this purpose, we set up a general equi-librium model encompassing the private and public sectors of the economy, where the government comes to the relief of the unemployed by increasing the welfare benefits per man. From this model, we extract an unemployment rate equation. The results that emerge from the empirical analysis sug-gest that social benefits per man may indeed adversely influence the rate of unemployment in EU-15. But the results change significantly when the EU member states are classified as high-, low- and average unemployment countries. In particular, we find that, whereas unemployment benefits exert perceptible positive influences in the high and average unemployment sub-groups, their influence in the low unemployment sub-group is nil. This finding, in conjunction with the evi-dence that the unemployment rate is invariant with respect to social benefits in USA and Canada, leads us to the conclusion that some EU countries may have to restructure their welfare systems, so as to reduce welfare benefits in favour of greater labour market flexibility and self-reliance on the part of workers.unemployment rate, welfare benefits, European Union

    Qualitative constraints as a tool of economic analysis

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    Economic agent, organic set, organization, qualitative constraints, A1,

    Fiscal discipline in the european monetary union

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    Returns to education: the Greek experience, 1988-1999

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    This article provides estimates of private rates of return to education in Greece derived from Mincerian-type earnings equations. The data come from the latest three household surveys of the country covering the 1988 to 1999 period. The empirical evidence suggests that: rates of return associated with female high school and university graduates exceed the respective rates for male graduates; rates of return pertaining to tertiary education graduates are increasing over time, whereas the corresponding rates for secondary education graduates follow an inverted U-shaped pattern and dropouts from any education degree end up with rates of return lower than the rates associated with the immediately preceding education level.

    Taxation and political business cycles in EU economies

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    This paper examines whether incumbent national governments of 11 member states of the European Union manipulated the tax policy instruments at their disposal in order to create national political business cycles, opportunistic or partisan. The empirical evidence, based on data concerning the 1965 to 1997 period, does not support this hypothesis. Rather, it appears that governments have pursued stabilization policies.
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