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Unpublished Paper
Place-Based Consequences of Person-Based Transfers: Evidence from Recessions
Upjohn Institute Working Papers
  • Brad J. Hershbein, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research
  • Bryan A. Stuart, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Upjohn Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2534-8164

Publication Date
1-27-2022
Series
Upjohn Institute working paper ; 22-362
**Published Version**
In Journal of Public Economics 224: 104923
DOI
10.17848/wp22-362
Abstract

This paper studies how government transfers respond to changes in local economic activity that emerge during recessions. Local labor markets that experience greater employment losses during recessions face persistent relative decreases in earnings per capita. However, these areas also experience persistent increases in transfers per capita, which offset 16 percent of the earnings loss on average. The increase in transfers is driven by unemployment insurance in the short run, and medical, retirement, and disability transfers in the long run. Our results show that nominally place-neutral transfer programs redistribute considerable sums of money to places with depressed economic conditions.

Issue Date
January 2022
Note
Upjohn project #35305
Sponsorship
We gratefully acknowledge funding from the 2018–2019 DOL Scholars Program (Contract # DOL-OPS-15-C-0060).
Citation Information
Hershbein, Brad and Bryan A. Stuart. 2022. "Place-Based Consequences of Person-Based Transfers: Evidence from Recessions." Upjohn Institute Working Paper 22-362. Kalamazoo, MI: W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.