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Jeff Borland. New finding: boosting JobSeeker wouldnt keep Australians away from paid work

Incentives, the Freakonomics author Steven Levitt once quipped, are the cornerstone of modern life. To this I would add: only if the incentive is big enough.

In Australia at present there is considerable support for increasing the JobSeeker unemployment payment by asignificant amountto make up for decades in which it has fallen relative to wages and other payments.

Opponents say an increase mightadversely affect incentivesto search for and take up paid work.

I have reviewed this claim inrecent researchand find even a substantial increase in JobSeeker wouldnt be big enough to make a difference.

If JobSeeker was to climb A$125 per week from $282.85 to $407.85, it would still be only a little more than half the national minimum wage.

The increase would leave JobSeeker recipients at the very bottom of the distribution of earnings of full-time adult workers the bottom percentile. This means 99 out of every 100 full-time jobs would pay more.

A higher JobSeeker payment of $125 per week could also preserve a significant financial incentive for recipients to take on extra days of paid work.

Under the current income test, the marginal gain from working an extra day at the minimum wage would range from $93 (for the first day) to $34 (third day).

Under a better income test the gain could besmoothedacross the week.

The real-life experiment

We have just had a real-life experiment that has told us what happens to incentives to shift into paid work when JobSeeker is nearly doubled.

The payment was almost doubled between March and September 2020, being boosted by a coronavirus supplement of $275 per week.


JobSeeker vs age pension

Source: Ben Phillips ANU, Services Australia


If getting the doubled payment meaningfully reduced incentives to take up paid work, JobSeeker recipients would be less likely to move from unemployment into employment than before, and job vacancies would take longer to fill.

Neither happened while JobSeeker was doubled.

Compared to the previous years of 2017, 2018 and 2019 the flow from unemployment into employment collapsed in April when the onset of COVID-19 cost 607,000 people their jobs.

But in the following months,while JobSeeker remained doubled, the proportion of unemployed people who transitioned into employment returned to previous monthly benchmarks.


Flows from unemployment to employment

ABS Labour Force, Borland


Second, there is no evidence of a rise in the vacancy rate, as would be expected if the increased JobSeeker payment was having a major impact on incentives to work.

The vacancy rate fell between February and April as would be expected, and then regained some losses, but at no point climbed higher than before the collapse, even with higher JobSeeker payments.

More JobSeeker might help

Searching for jobs takes time and costs money. More income from JobSeeker means less financial stress and more bandwidth to commit to job search, and more resources such as the ability to pay for transport to and clothing for interviews.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development made this point a decade ago in itsreview of Australia.

It said Newstart (the old name for JobSeeker) had fallen to the point where questions could be asked about its effectiveness in providing sufficient support for those experiencing a job loss, or enabling someone to look for a suitable job.

This article has been republished from_The Conversation_30 November 2020

Jeff Borland is Professor of Economics,University of Melbourne

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