Public Policy and the Labor Market during COVID-19
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM (EST)
- Chair: Jesse Rothstein, University of California-Berkeley
The Impact of the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation on Job Search and Vacancy Creation
Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC) increased US unemployment benefits by $600 a week. Theory predicts that FPUC will decrease job applications, and could decrease vacancy creation. We estimate the effect of FPUC on job applications and vacancy creation week by week, from March to July 2020, using granular data from the online jobs platform Glassdoor. We exploit variation in the proportional increase in benefits across local labor markets. To isolate the effect of FPUC, we flexibly allow for different trends in local labor markets differentially exposed to the COVID-19 crisis. We verify that trends in outcomes prior to the FPUC do not correlate with future increases in benefits, which supports our identification assumption. First, we find that a 10% increase in unemployment benefits caused a 3.6% decline in applications, but did not decrease vacancy creation; hence, FPUC increased tightness (vacancies/applications). Second, we document that tightness was unusually depressed during the FPUC period. Altogether, our results imply that the positive effect of FPUC on tightness was welfare improving: FPUC decreased competition among applicants at a time when jobs were unusually scarce. Our results also help explain prior findings that FPUC did not decrease employment.The Targeting and Impact of Paycheck Protection Loans to Small Businesses
Abstract
What happens when vast public resources are allocated by private actors, whose objectives may be imperfectly aligned with public goals? We study this question in the context of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which relied on private banks to rapidly disburse more than five hundred billion dollars of aid to small businesses. We present a model suggesting that such delegation is optimal if delay is very costly, the variance of the impact of funds across firms is small, and the correlation between public and private objectives is high. We then use firm-level data to measure heterogeneity in the impact of PPP and to assess whether banks targeted loans to high-impact firms. Using an instrumental variables approach, we find that PPP loans increased business’s expected survival rates by 9 to 22 percentage points and modestly boosted employment. The potential for heterogeneous treatment effects suggests that targeting may have increased the overall program impact. Yet while banks did target loans to their pre-existing customers, treatment effect heterogeneity is sufficiently modest and the correlation between bank loan allocations and public objectives seems sufficiently strong, so that delegation could still have been optimal given the high costs of delay.Discussant(s)
Jesse Rothstein
,
University of California-Berkeley
Camille Landais
,
London School of Economics
Christopher Neilson
,
Princeton University
JEL Classifications
- J2 - Demand and Supply of Labor
- M5 - Personnel Economics