The role of short-time work and discretionary policy measures in mitigating the effects of the COVID-19 crisis in Germany.

Michael Christl, Silvia De Poli, Tine Hufkens, Andreas Peichl, Mattia Ricci
Author Information
  1. Michael Christl: Fisacl Policy Analysis Unit (B2), European Commission (DG JRC), Seville, Spain.
  2. Silvia De Poli: Fisacl Policy Analysis Unit (B2), European Commission (DG JRC), Seville, Spain.
  3. Tine Hufkens: Fisacl Policy Analysis Unit (B2), European Commission (DG JRC), Seville, Spain.
  4. Andreas Peichl: ifo Institute and LMU, Munich, Germany. ORCID
  5. Mattia Ricci: Fisacl Policy Analysis Unit (B2), European Commission (DG JRC), Seville, Spain.

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on German household income in 2020 using a micro-level approach. We combine a microsimulation model with novel labour market transition techniques to simulate the COVID-19 shock on the German labour market. We find the consequences of the labour market shock to be highly regressive with a strong impact on the poorest households. However, this effect is nearly entirely offset by automatic stabilisers and discretionary policy measures. We explore the cushioning effect of these policies in detail, showing that short-time working schemes and especially the one-off payments for children are effective in cushioning the income loss of the poor.

Keywords

References

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