Unemployment Insurance, Productivity, and Wage Dispersion
This paper studies the effects of unemployment insurance on productivity, output, and residual wage dispersion in a search
environment in which the firms enjoy monopsony power in the labor market. The model features wage posting by the firms and
on-the-job search by the workers. The unemployed workers receive unemployment benefits financed by a proportional pay-roll tax. In
equilibrium, unemployment insurance increases welfare not only by providing consumption-smoothing benefits but also by increasing
output. Additionally, higher unemployment benefits lead to less residual wage dispersion, compression of the lower half of the
wage earnings distribution, and a smaller incidence of low wages.