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One major criticism of universal basic income is that unconditional cash transfers discourage recipients from working. We estimate the causal effects of a universal cash transfer on short-run labor market activity by exploiting the timing and variation of a long-running unconditional and universal transfer: Alaska's Permanent Fund Dividend. We find evidence of both a positive labor demand and negative labor supply response to the transfers, document important heterogeneity across workers, and provide a set of placebo tests supporting our main results. Altogether, a $1,000 increase in the per-person disbursement leads to a 0.2% labor market contraction on an annual basis.Date
2019Publisher
SSRNType
Working PaperCitation
Bibler, A., Guettabi, M., & Reimer, M. (2019). Universal Cash Transfers and Labor Market Outcomes. Available at SSRN 3357230.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3357230