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Welfare Sanctions and Deprivation in Germany: Do First Sanctions Lead to Higher Levels of Deprivation Among the Long-Term Unemployed and Recipients of Basic Income Support?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2022

PAUL SEVERIN LÖWE
Affiliation:
University of Bamberg, Germany; Chair of Sociology, especially Methods of Empirical Social Research; Feldkirchenstraße 21, 96052 Bamberg, Germany email: paul.loewe@uni-bamberg.de
STEFANIE ALEXANDRA UNGER
Affiliation:
Stefanie Alexandra Unger, Institute for Employment Research; Regensburger Strasse 104, 90478 Nuremberg, Germany email: stefanie.alexandra.unger@gmail.com
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Abstract

In Germany, as in many other European countries, vast changes in the welfare regime – towards workfare – have taken place. As a central activating element of workfare, sanctions were introduced to take effect by temporarily increasing deprivation through benefit cuts. This paper provides first quantitative insights on the effect of first sanctions on deprivation and contributes to the recent debate on the (un)constitutionality of sanctions, which re-emerged after a verdict of the Federal Constitutional Court, criticizing the lack of knowledge about the effects of sanctions on those affected. We implement a difference-in-differences propensity score matching approach that addresses selection on observables and individual time constant unobserved differences. High data accuracy is ensured by combining the “Panel Labour Market and Social Security” (PASS) with administrative data from the Federal Employment Agency. The results illustrate a slightly higher yet statistically insignificant level of deprivation for first-sanctioned unemployment/basic income recipients compared to non-sanctioned recipients. The results hint in the direction that higher levels of deprivation are not what activates the sanctioned beneficiaries to reintegrate into the labour market. We discuss whether the results imply a significant deviation from the socio-cultural subsistence minimum of sanctioned recipients and a failure of the welfare state.

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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 (https://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
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

FIGURE 1. The number of deprived goods for non-sanctioned and sanctioned benefit recipients; DiD-PSM estimator from to to t+1Source: PASS and process data from the German Employment Agency 2006-2017, own calculations; Notes: bootstrapped standard errors, 100 replications, N (controls)=7662, N (treated)=289

Figure 1

FIGURE 2 The number of deprived goods for non-sanctioned and sanctioned benefit recipients at t-1, to and t+1Source: PASS and process data from the German Employment Agency 2006-2017, own calculations; Notes: bootstrapped standard errors, 100 replications; N (controls)=7662, N (treated)=289

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