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Do German Welfare-to-Work Programmes Reduce Welfare Dependency and Increase Employment?
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 2157182
Author(s) Huber, Martin; Lechner, Michael; Wunsch, Conny; Walter, Thomas
Author(s) at UniBasel Wunsch, Conny
Year 2011
Title Do German Welfare-to-Work Programmes Reduce Welfare Dependency and Increase Employment?
Journal German Economic Review
Volume 12
Number 2
Pages / Article-Number 182-204
Abstract During the last decade, many Western economies reformed their welfare systems with the aim of activating welfare recipients by increasing welfare-to-work programmes (WTWP) and job-search enforcement. We evaluate the short-term effects of three important German WTWP implemented after a major reform in January 2005 ('Hartz IV'), namely short training, further training with a planned duration of up to three months and public workfare programmes ('One-Euro-Jobs'). Our analysis is based on a combination of a large-scale survey and administrative data that is rich with respect to individual, household, agency level and regional information. We use this richness of the data to base the econometric evaluation on a selection-on-observables approach. We find that short-term training programmes, on average, increase their participants' employment perspectives. There is also considerable effect heterogeneity across different subgroups of participants that could be exploited to improve the allocation of welfare recipients to the specific programmes and thus increase overall programme effectiveness.
Publisher WILEY-BLACKWELL
URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/j.1468-0475.2010.00515.x
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/49406/
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0475.2010.00515.x
ISI-Number 000289526000003
Document type (ISI) Article
 
   

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