Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2001
Abstract
This Article evaluates the merit of liberalizing unemployment insurance eligibility as a means to achieve progressive wealth redistribution-an idea that has recently gained popularity among policymakers and legal scholars. Unemployment insurance (UI) provides temporary, partial wage replacement to workers who suffer unexpected job loss, but it tends to exclude workers who have very low wages or hours of work, or who quit for reasons considered "personal" (for example, to accommodate family demands). Professor Lester argues that while redistribution to workers who are poor or who have caregiving obligations is a desirable goal, expanding UI is a poor way to do it. First, UI benefits are triggered not by low income potential, but rather by the incidence of job loss (which affects both wealthy and poor workers). Second, a comprehensive and ethical program of support for families with caregiving needs would have design features and goals that diverge sharply from UI. Instead of unemployment insurance, other methods such as direct tax and transfer programs and comprehensive family assistance programs are superior ways to transfer wealth to poor workers and to workers with caregiving obligations.
Disciplines
Health Law and Policy | Labor and Employment Law | Law | Law and Society | Social Welfare Law
Recommended Citation
Gillian Lester,
Unemployment Insurance and Wealth Redistribution,
49
UCLA L. Rev.
335
(2001).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/2206
Included in
Health Law and Policy Commons, Labor and Employment Law Commons, Law and Society Commons, Social Welfare Law Commons
Comments
This article was originally published in UCLA Law Review.