Stable Income, Stable Family

63 Pages Posted: 31 Aug 2020 Last revised: 2 May 2025

See all articles by Isaac D. Swensen

Isaac D. Swensen

Montana State University - Bozeman - Department of Agricultural Economics and Economics

Jason Lindo

Texas A&M University

Krishna Regmi

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Date Written: August 2020

Abstract

We document the effect of unemployment insurance generosity on divorce and fertility using an identification strategy that leverages state-level changes in maximum benefits over time and comparisons across workers who have been laid off and those that have not been laid off. The results indicate that higher maximum benefit levels mitigate the effects of layoffs. In particular, they mitigate increases in divorce associated with men’s layoffs; increases in separations associated with women’s layoffs; reductions in fertility associated with men’s layoffs; and increases in fertility associated with women’s layoffs.

Suggested Citation

Swensen, Isaac D. and Lindo, Jason and Regmi, Krishna, Stable Income, Stable Family (August 2020). NBER Working Paper No. w27753, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3683637

Isaac D. Swensen (Contact Author)

Montana State University - Bozeman - Department of Agricultural Economics and Economics ( email )

Bozeman, MT 59717-2920
United States

Jason Lindo

Texas A&M University

7101 University Avenue
STEM 318 H
Texarkana, TX 75503
United States

Krishna Regmi

Florida Gulf Coast University ( email )

10485 FGCU Blvd S
Ft. Myers, FL 33965-6565
United States

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