Labor Market Policies in High- and Low-Interest Rate Environments: Evidence from the Euro Area
Povilas Lastauskas, Julius Stak\.enas

TL;DR
This paper examines how the effectiveness of labor market policies in the Euro Area varies depending on whether monetary policy is loose or tight, highlighting the importance of coordinated policy design.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method using Mallow's $C_{p}$ criterion for averaging local projections, improving robustness in policy impact analysis.
Findings
ALMPs reduce unemployment under loose monetary policy
Higher employment protection has expansionary effects under tight monetary policy
Policy effectiveness is significantly influenced by monetary policy environment
Abstract
Do labor market policies initiated in periods of loose monetary policy yield different outcomes from those introduced when monetary tightening prevails? Using data from 11 euro-area members up to 2010 -- and extending to 17 countries up to 2020 -- we analyze three labor market policies: replacement rates, spending on active labor market policies (ALMPs), and employment protection. We find that these policies deliver different macroeconomic outcomes in low- and high-interest rate environments. In particular, ALMPs reduce unemployment if implemented under a loose monetary policy but not otherwise, whereas higher employment protection delivers expansionary effects under a tight monetary policy. These findings highlight that the effectiveness of labor market policies is significantly influenced by the monetary policy environment, emphasizing the need for coordinated policy design.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLabor market dynamics and wage inequality · German Economic Analysis & Policies
