Essay
Aside from constitutional issues, few policies are more uniquely Canadian than the unemployment insurance program, now named the Employment Insurance program. This wide-reaching program has profound effects in many of Canada's labour markets. As the textbook indicates, there have been numerous commissions over the years that have recommended reform, most of which have not been implemented. Your mission here is to summarize the extensive literature, both theoretical and empirical, concerning the role that unemployment insurance plays in labour markets.
• What are the primary economic effects of Canada's UI program on the job search activity of unemployed Canadians? Although you should resort to the job search approach as your analytical
framework, keep your analysis to an intuitive, non-technical, non-graphical level.
• What are the primary economic effects of the UI program on firm behaviour, particularly on layo decisions? You should resort to the implicit contract approach as your analytical framework.
• What are the effects on the labour supply behaviour of those who are not currently eligible, especially those with low labour force attachment?
• What is the overall effect of the UI program on labour force participation and unemployment? Is positive or negative, and why?
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Q1: Implicit contract theory is based on the
Q2: The efficiency wage hypothesis states that firms
Q4: The "stopping rule" is associated with which
Q5: According to the theory of job search,
Q6: All of the following are considered to
Q7: In the efficiency wage model of the
Q8: The most important way in which unemployment
Q9: The condition for the equilibrium level of
Q10: In the insider-outsider theory, what is NOT
Q11: Those who are jobless and out of