Comparing Econometric Methods to Empirically Evaluate Job-Search Assistance
Abstract
We test whether different empirical methods give different results when evaluating job-search assistance programs. Budgetary problems at the Dutch unemployment insurance (UI) administration in March 2010, caused a sharp drop in the availability of these programs. Using administrative data provided by the UI administration, we evaluate the effect of the program using (1) the policy discontinuity as a quasiexperiment, (2) conventional matching methods, and (3) the timing-of-events model.
All three methods use the same data to consider the same program in the same setting, and also yield similar results. The program reduces job finding during the first six months after enrollment. At longer durations, the quasi-experimental estimates are not significantly different from zero, while the non-experimental methods show a small negative effect.
Other description
JEL: J64, C14, C31
Collections
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Date
2017-02Author
Muller, Paul
van der Klaauw, Bas
Heyma, Arjan
Keywords
empirical policy evaluation
job-search assistance
unemployment duration
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
691
Language
eng