Using Financial Incentives and Improving Information to Increase Labour Market Success: A Non-Parametric Evaluation of the ‘Want2Work’ Programme
The ‘Want2Work’ programme was designed to help individuals back into work. This article uses propensity score matching to evaluate the success of a policy that cannot otherwise be evaluated using standard parametric techniques. Using a range of estimation methods, sub-samples and types of job, the scheme was successful. Our most conservative estimates indicate that participants were 4-7 percentage points more likely to find employment than a control group of non-treated job-seekers. Effects were even stronger for Incapacity Benefit recipients. Moreover, there is little evidence that participants were placed in low quality or temporary jobs.
Year of publication: |
2006
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Authors: | Roberts, Jennifer ; Lindley, Joanne ; McIntosh, Steven ; Murray, Carolyn Czoski ; Edlin, Richard |
Institutions: | Academic Unit of Health Economics, Leeds Institute of Health Sciences |
Subject: | Active labour market policy | re-employment likelihood | propensity score matching |
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