The Persistence of Welfare Participation
Abstract
Welfare persistence is estimated in and compared between Swedish-born and foreignborn
households. This is done within the framework of a time-stationary dynamic
discrete choice model controlling for the initial condition and unobserved
heterogeneity. Three different types of persistence are controlled for in terms of
observed and unobserved heterogeneity, serial correlation, and structural state
dependence, the focus being on the latter measure. In a second step we analyze the
long-run effects of receiving social assistance on future household earnings and
disposable income.
The results show that state dependence in Swedish welfare participation is strong in
both Swedish-born and foreign-born. However, the size of the effect is three times as
large for the latter group. When the effect is distributed over time, it disappears after
three years for both groups. The effect of structural state dependence is decomposed
into a number of observed explanatory factors. Surprisingly small effects are found
from typical foreign-born factors such as time in the country and country of origin,
both important determinants for welfare participation in general.
When investigating the effect of social assistance participation on future earnings, we
find a strong and persistent effect over the whole observation window, while no such
effect could be found for disposable income. This indicates that the economic
incentives to leave the dependency are very weak. The picture is similar for both
Swedish-born and foreign-born, even though the negative earnings effect is somewhat
larger for the latter.
University
Göteborg University, School of Buisness, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007-09-28Author
Andrén, Thomas
Keywords
welfare participation
immigrants
dynamic probit model
persistence
state dependence
unobserved heterogeneity
initial condition
GHK simulator
earnings
disposable income
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
266
Language
eng