This paper analyses the importance of financial dis-incentives for workers in Denmark. Based on
a panel survey which is merged to a number of administrative registers it is possible to calculate
precise measures of the economic incentives for labour force participants between employment
in a full time job and being on unemployment insurance benefits and considering also the fixed
costs of work. The results indicate large dis-incentives effects for some groups, especially low
paid women. In 1996, 6 per cent of Danish men and 13 per cent of the women had a lower
disposable net income if working in a full-time job compared to being on unemployment benefits.
The effect of these financial dis-incentives is analysed in simple reduced form models of on-thejob
search, unemployed search behaviour, unemployment risk, and transitions out of the labour
force. We find that the net compensation rate in unemployment has a significant impact on
women?s propensity to leave the labour force, on measures of search intensity, on the risk of
being hit by unemployment and on one of our flexibility measures, i.e. the maximum acceptable
commuting time to a job. The net compensation rate has no impact on the willingness to move to
another place to get a job. However, here we find a significant impact from job attitude related
measures. We end the paper reporting the results from including attitude variables along with
economic variables. We find a number of significant effects from attitude variables. However, the
main conclusion is that economic incentives dominate the present analysis of unemployment
traps