6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265aef
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Rational Poverty or Poor Rationality? The Take‐up of Social Assistance Benefits
Regina T. Riphahnsubject
ReceiptEconomics and EconometricsPovertymedia_common.quotation_subjectStigma (botany)Rationalitylanguage.human_languageGermanSocial assistancelanguageEconomicsDemographic economicsDuration (project management)Welfaremedia_commondescription
In several countries social assistance dependence has been increasing since the 1980s. After surveying the theoretical and empirical take-up literature, this study presents estimates of recent rates of non take-up of social assistance benefits. Once methodological shortcomings of prior estimations are corrected, the results show that take-up has fallen recently and thus cannot explain the rising welfare receipt. Following theoretical predictions, the probability that a rational individual takes up social assistance increases with the expected benefit amount and duration, and falls with application cost and stigma. More than half of all households eligible for transfers under the German social assistance program did not claim their benefits.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001-09-01 | Review of Income and Wealth |