Can Arts-Based Interventions Enhance Labor Market Outcomes among Youth? Evidence from a Randomized Trial in Rio de Janeiro
This paper provides findings of a small-scale, innovative labor training program that uses expressive arts and theatre as a pedagogical tool. The corresponding life skills training component is combined with a technical component teaching vocational skills. To our knowledge, this is the first paper to rigorously evaluate the effectiveness of a training program constructed around expressive arts. Using a randomized assignment of favela youth into program and control groups, we look at the short-run treatment effects on a comprehensive set of outcomes including employment and earnings as well as measures of personality traits and risk behavior. We find positive short-run employment and earnings impacts five months after the program finalized; no impacts are found for shorter periods. These short-run impacts are economically very large, compared to those typically found in the literature: a 33.3 per cent increase in the probability of being employed, and a 23.6 per cent increase in earnings. We find no evidence of significant program impacts on other outcomes, including personality-related traits, providing evidence that these traits may not be malleable for young adults in the short-run. We argue that the estimated labor market impacts are due to a combination of both skills formation and signaling of higher quality workers to employers.
Year of publication: |
2014-05
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Authors: | Calero, Carla ; Corseuil, Carlos Henrique ; Gonzales, Veronica ; Kluve, Jochen ; Soares, Yuri |
Institutions: | Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) |
Subject: | labor market training | youths | randomized controlled trial | life skills |
Saved in:
Extent: | application/pdf |
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Series: | |
Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Notes: | Number 8210 46 pages |
Classification: | J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity ; J68 - Public Policy ; I38 - Government Policy; Provision and Effects of Welfare Programs |
Source: |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010959808