Can a Shorter Workweek Induce Higher Employment? Mandatory Reductions in the Workweek and Employment Subsidies |
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Authors: | S. Nuri Erbaş Chera L. Sayers |
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Affiliation: | (1) Middle Eastern Department, International Monetary Fund, Room 7-115, 700 19th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C, 20431, U.S.A.;(2) 11750 Owens Glen Way, North Potomac, MD, 20878, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | This paper presents a unified model of the impact on employment of a mandatory reduction in work hours in combination with an employment subsidy to reduce quasi-fixed costs of employment, while attempting to maintain worker's take-home pay or welfare level. Achieving the dual policy objectives of enhancing employment and maintaining worker income is not necessarily feasible. Nevertheless, a reduction in the legal workweek may induce a degree of downward wage flexibility, while an employment subsidy to firms accommodates downward wage rigidity. It may be possible, therefore, to increase employment with a policy that combines a reduction in the workweek with an employment subsidy. In general, however, the long run employment outcome is ambiguous, and a decline in output cannot be ruled out. More direct policy measures whose impact can be assessed with greater certainty—in particular, removing structural rigidities in the labor market—should be given priority to decrease long term unemployment. |
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Keywords: | workweek overtime work labor demand labor supply structural unemployment |
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