Threat Effect of the Labour Market Programs in Denmark : Evidence From a Quasi-Experiment
This paper analyses the pre-participation effect of the Danish active labour market programs on the welfare recipients. The Danish participation rules differ for quot;youngquot; and quot;oldquot; individuals. A reform which increased the age boundary between quot;youngquot; and quot;oldquot;is used to identify the effect of the quot;threatquot; of active labour market program participation before the actual participation starts. We use a register-based dataset and focus on the transition intensity out of welfare. We show that the reform led to a 25% increase in early exit rate for men, which corresponds to effect of halving the benefits. There is no indication that the reform led to exits elsewhere than employment or to lower-quality jobs. The impact on women is smaller, statistically not significant, and partially related to movements to education. There is some evidence that the effect is related to the arrival of specific information (anticipation effect) and it is limited to a number of compliers only