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Welfare Dynamics and Employment: Heterogeneous Paths Through Means-tested Basic Income in Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2019

KERSTIN BRUCKMEIER
Affiliation:
Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Regensburger Strasse 104, D-90478 Nuremberg, Germany emails: Kerstin.Bruckmeier@iab.de; Torsten.Lietzmann@iab.de
TORSTEN LIETZMANN
Affiliation:
Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Regensburger Strasse 104, D-90478 Nuremberg, Germany emails: Kerstin.Bruckmeier@iab.de; Torsten.Lietzmann@iab.de
ANNA THERESA SAILE
Affiliation:
Department of History and Sociology, University of Konstanz, Universitatsstr. 10, D-78457 Konstanz, Germany email: Anna-Theresa.Saile@uni-konstanz.de
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Abstract

This study contributes to the international literature on welfare dynamics, by providing a differentiated picture of paths through the means-tested Basic Income for recipients who are capable of working, after the reorganisation of the basic income system in Germany in 2005. We analyse the employment and benefit trajectories of individuals who became recipients for the first time between 2007 and 2009 by methods of sequence and cluster analysis based on representative administrative individual data. We find a significant polarisation between long-term recipients and those with an early exit from benefit receipt via full-time employment. One in three new recipients remains in benefit receipt for the next years and shows almost no employment activities. Approximately 23 percent leave benefit receipt quickly and work in full-time employment. Several other different paths exist between these two poles. These heterogeneous trajectories should be characteristic for broad basic income systems and require a variety of policies that in part are beyond labour market policies.

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Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019
Figure 0

TABLE 1. Basic income recipients in Germany, 2015

Figure 1

TABLE 2. State Space for Sequence Analysis Regarding Benefit Receipt and Labour Market Status

Figure 2

TABLE 3. Labour market trajectories after basic income (BI) entry

Figure 3

Figure 1. Monthly distribution of labour market states by cluster.

Source: Own calculations based on ADMINP and IEB 2012
Figure 4

Figure 2. Monthly distribution of labour market states by cluster.

Source: Own calculations based on ADMINP and IEB 2012
Figure 5

Figure 3. Monthly distribution of labour market states by cluster.

Source: Own calculations based on ADMINP and IEB 2012
Figure 6

TABLE 4. Distribution of individual and household characteristics measured at welfare entry by cluster

Figure 7

Figure A1. Shares of labour market activities per month starting with the first BI spell. Source: Own calculations based on ADMINP and IEB 2012.

Figure 8

Figure A2. Cluster cut-off indicators. Notes: ASW = Average Silhouette Width, HG = Hubert’s Gamma, PBC = Point Biserial Correlation, HC = Hubert’s C. Source: Own calculations based on ADMINP and IEB 2012.

Figure 9

TABLE A1. Distribution of individual and household characteristics measured at welfare entry by subsample

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TABLE A2. Quality of partition – ASW by cluster

Figure 11

TABLE A3. Distribution of total observation time (36 month) on different labour market states by cluster (in months)

Figure 12

TABLE A4. Multinomial logit model, marginal effects