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Competence Centre on Microeconomic Evaluation - Tools

Carrots, no stick, no driver: the employment impact of job search assistance in a regime with minimal monitoring and sanctions

This paper uses a high quality longitudinal dataset to assess the impact of an active labour market intervention consisting of referral for interview plus Job Search Assistance (JSA) with the public employment service in Ireland during a period when both job search monitoring and sanctions were virtually non-existent. We find that, relative to a control group with no intervention, unemployed individuals that received the interview letter and participated in JSA were 15 per cent less likely to have exited to employment prior to 12 months. The results hold when tested against the influences of both sample selection and unobserved heterogeneity bias. The negative treatment impact is attributed to individuals lowering their job search intensity on learning, through the JSA activation interview, of the lax nature of the activation process. The research, which is unusual in the international literature in allowing the assessment of the impact of job search assistance in the virtual absence of monitoring and sanctions, highlights the need for effective monitoring and sanctions as integral components of labour market activation programmes.

Authors
Seamus McGuinness
Philip J. O’Connell
Elish Kelly
Country
Ireland
Publication Year
2013
Ranges
Intervention
Intervention Start Year
2006
Intervention End Year
2006
Evaluation
Evaluation Start Year
2006
Evaluation End Year
2008
Policy field
Labour market services
Job-search assistance
Target group
Labour market status
Unemployed (All cat.)
Details
Funding Source
Other
Outcome Variable
Employment status
Data Source
Administrative
Survey
Evaluation Method
PSM