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Competence Centre on Microeconomic Evaluation - Tools

Courses or individual counselling: does job search assistance work?

How does labour market policy affect welfare recipients and long-term unemployed people? We investigate whether job search assistance (JSA) helps disadvantaged individuals to find jobs and whether courses or individual counselling is more successful in reaching this goal. To evaluate individual employment effects, we apply a quasi-experimental design and construct suitable comparison groups using propensity score matching methods. We compare participants to nonparticipants as well as participants of both schemes directly. Our article benefits from access to rich administrative data from the German Federal Employment Agency. When comparing participants to nonparticipants, results suggest that the individual JSA does not affect participants employment prospects at all and that the course JSA even decreased their employment chances. At the same time, differences in these effects can be ascribed to programme design differences and to differences in the groups of participants. Therefore, we compare both programmes directly to each other, that is, we use the other programme participants as a comparison group, respectively. We found some evidence that individual JSA performs better than course JSA.

Authors
Sarah Bernhard
Eva Kopf
Country
Germany
Publication Year
2014
Ranges
Intervention
Intervention Start Year
2005
Intervention End Year
2005
Evaluation
Evaluation Start Year
2005
Evaluation End Year
2007
Policy field
Labour market services
Counselling and monitoring
Job-search assistance
Target group
Labour market status
Long term unemployed
Unemployed (All cat.)
Details
Funding Source
Other
Outcome Variable
Employment status
Data Source
Administrative
Evaluation Method
PSM