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Hiring incentives and labour force participation in Italy

A long-standing economic tradition maintains that labour supply reacts to market tightness; its sensitivity to job quality has received less attention. If firms hire workers with both temporary and open-ended contracts, does participation increase when more permanent jobs are available? We investigate this relationship within a policy evaluation framework; in particular, we examine how labour supply reacted in Italy to a recent subsidy in favour of open-ended contracts. This subsidy increased labour force participation by 1.4% in 2001 and 2.1% in 2002. This increase was concentrated on males aged 35-54, with a low or at most a secondary schooling level.

Authors
Piero Cipollone
Piero Corrado Di Maria
Anita Guelfi
Country
Italy
Publication Year
2004
Ranges
Intervention
Intervention Start Year
2001
Intervention End Year
2002
Evaluation
Evaluation Start Year
2001
Evaluation End Year
2002
Policy field
Employment incentives
Private sector employment incentives
Target group
Labour market status
Inactive
Details
Funding Source
Other
Outcome Variable
Employment status
Data Source
Survey
Evaluation Method
DID