This paper examines the impact of temporary unemployment insurance (UI) coverage on re-employment wages using a recent Canadian micro-level panel data. Through a random effect setup, both workers’ wage and employment/unemployment durations’ unobserved heterogeneities are controlled for. Furthermore, motivated by the literature of temporary UI coverage’s time-varying impact on reemployment process, this paper allows UI’s impact on reemployment wages to be time-varying as well. The result shows reemployment wages of UI-covered workers are indeed statistically higher than benefit exhaustees, 12% to 14% if they get re-employed with at least 11 weeks of remaining benefit.
|