Litcius/Paper detail

Second Earners and In-Work Poverty in Europe

H. Xavier Jara, Daria Popova

2020Journal of Social Policy18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Dual or multiple earnership has been considered an important factor to prevent in-work poverty. The aim of this paper is to quantify the impact of second earnership on the risk of in-work poverty and the role of the tax-benefit system in moderating this risk. Our analysis refers to 2014 and employs EUROMOD, the tax-benefit microsimulation model for the European Union and the United Kingdom. In order to assess the role of second earners in preventing in-work poverty we simulate a counterfactual scenario where second earners become unemployed. Our results show that the effect of net replacement rates (i.e. the ratio of household income before and after the transition of second earners to unemployment) on the probability of in-work poverty is negative and statistically significant, but in relative terms it appears to be small compared to the effects of individual labour market characteristics, such as low pay and part-time employment.

Topics & Concepts

PovertyMicrosimulationEconomicsCounterfactual thinkingWork (physics)UnemploymentOrder (exchange)European unionLabour economicsDemographic economicsEconomic growthPsychologyEngineeringMechanical engineeringFinanceTransport engineeringEconomic policySocial psychologyEmployment and Welfare StudiesSocial Policy and Reform StudiesLabor market dynamics and wage inequality