SHORT-TERM ABSENTEEISM DUE TO SICKNESS:THE SWEDISH EXPERIENCE, 1986 - 1991

Andrén, Danielaswe
Department of Economicsswe
2006-12-06swe
2007-02-09T11:16:35Z
2007-02-09T11:16:35Z
2001swe
The goal of this paper is to analyze short term-absences from work (i.e., periods of seven days or less) in Sweden during a period with two different reforms. As a theoretical model we use a utility-maximization framework with two restrictions (time and budget constraints). Using multiple spell data, short-term absenteeism is analyzed for a period with three regimes, and it is found that the 1991 reform (which lowered the replacement rate) had a stronger effect on the hazard of ending short-term absenteeism than did the 1987 reform (which eliminated the previous unpaid "waiting day", while restricting the remuneration to only those days when people were scheduled to work). Even though economic incentives mattered, people with poorer health did not "shorten" their absences in the same extent as those with better healthswe
44 pagesswe
460144 bytes
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1315swe
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Lawswe
1403-2465swe
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/2877
enswe
Working Papers in Economics, nr 46swe
short-term absenteeism sickness spells; repeated events; unobservedswe
Labourswe
SHORT-TERM ABSENTEEISM DUE TO SICKNESS:THE SWEDISH EXPERIENCE, 1986 - 1991swe
Reportswe

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