Weather-related Employment Subsidies as a Remedy for Seasonal Unemployment? Evidence from Germany
Referierte Fachzeitschrift // 2012Many European countries try to reduce seasonal unemployment by subsidizing short-time employment during the winter period. Despite such costly efforts, pronounced seasonal unemployment patterns continue to exist. This puts doubts on the effectiveness of such policy interventions. This paper provides a first empirical assessment of the effectiveness of different subsidy schemes by exploiting the institutional variation in a German subsidy scheme that applies to the construction sector and the variation in local weather and business cycle conditions across 20 years. The findings confirm that generous short-time subsidies reduce individual lay-off probabilities in the case of poor weather conditions. However, the link between weather conditions and seasonal lay-offs is much less strong than expected, making planned capacity reductions the main suspect for causing seasonality in unemployment patterns.
Arntz, Melanie und (2012), Weather-related Employment Subsidies as a Remedy for Seasonal Unemployment? Evidence from Germany, LABOUR: Review of Labour Economics and Industrial Relations 26 , 266-286