Seminar

Hybrid seminar: Job Loss, Unemployment Insurance and Health: Evidence from Brazil

On Tuesday March 14th 2023, Diogo Britto (Bocconi University) will give a presentation titled: "Job Loss, Unemployment Insurance and Health: Evidence from Brazil." To attend this seminar, please send an e-mail to Simone Pailer (S.Pailer@cpb.nl). You will be registered at the reception or will receive a Teams-invitation via Outlook.

Date
March 14, 2023
Time
13:00 - 14:00
Location
Room "Zeedistelzaal", Bezuidenhoutseweg 30, The Hague, and online (Teams). To attend this seminar, please send an e-mail to Simone Pailer (S.Pailer@cpb.nl). You will be registered at the reception or will receive a Teams invitation via Outlook
Presentation
Diogo Britto (Bocconi University)
Discussant
Discussant: Wiljan van den Berge (CPB)
Working language
English

We study the causal effects of job loss and unemployment insurance (UI) on hospitalization and mortality for Brazilian workers. We construct a novel dataset that merges millions of individual-level administrative records on employment, hospital discharges, and mortality for a period of 17 years. Using a difference-in-differences research design that compares laid-off workers from firms that experienced mass layoffs to similar workers in firms that did not, we find that job loss causes a 30% increase in the probability of male in-patient admission to public hospitals, and a 34% increase in the risk of male mortality. Our estimates are driven primarily by external causes and apply to both older and younger male workers. We find no effects on female outcomes, but children of both male and female workers are subjected to higher risks of hospitalization following their parent’s job dismissal. Using a regression-discontinuity design that exploits variation in UI eligibility following job loss, we show that UI largely offsets the risk of hospitalization for older male workers. Our results indicate that governmental labor market policies can effectively mitigate a substantial portion of the adverse health impacts of job loss.

Contacts