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Estimating Equilibrium Effects of Job Search Assistance

Randomized experiments provide policy relevant treatment effects if there are no spillovers between participants and nonparticipants. We show that this assumption is violated for a Danish activation program for unemployed workers. Using a difference-in-difference model we show that the nonparticipants in the experiment regions find jobs slower after the introduction of the activation program (relative to workers in other regions). We then estimate an equilibrium search model. This model shows that a large scale role out of the activation program decreases welfare, while a standard partial microeconometric cost-benefit analysis would conclude the opposite.

Authors
Michael Rosholm
Michael Svarer
Bas van der Klaauw
Pieter Gautier
Paul Muller
Country
Denmark
Publication Year
2015
Ranges
Intervention
Intervention Start Year
2005
Intervention End Year
2006
Evaluation
Evaluation Start Year
2007
Evaluation End Year
2007
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
Evaluation Method
DID