wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/4f9ab821500e38a9b71277c323de93fc-matkovic-teo-and-ba/info.yaml

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abstract: 'EVALUATION OF ACTIVE LABOUR MARKET POLICIES IN 2009 AND 2010 IN THE
REPUBLIC OF CROATIA
Teo Matkovic, Zdenko Babic, Annamaria Vuga
This report brings forth an evaluation of Active labour market policy
programmes ran by Croatian Public Employment Service (HZZ) in 2009 and
2010. We observed whether participants were registered with HZZ as
unemployed persons at several points in time after their participation
in programme ceased. Effectiveness was analytically evaluated by the
application of matching techniques, as we compared outcomes of
participants with control group comprised of unemployed persons with
similar observable characteristics who did not participate in measures.
We evaluated five measures for which appropriate matching could be
enacted: (1) employment subsidies for the youth with no employment
experience, (2) long-term unemployed and (3) older unemployed persons;
(4) training programmes for the unemployed and (5) public works. Within
the observed period, expenses and coverage of ALMPs were on increase,
although Croatia still lags considerably in this respect after most EU
countries. Results of this quasi-experimental evaluation approach do not
indicate that participation bears a particularly strong effect with
respect to the observed outcome. Participants in all three employment
subsidy programmes were less likely to be in unemployment than controls
for the first two years after subsidies ceased, but the advantage of
participants was declining over time, and the matching effect is likely
overestimated as it does not account for creaming effect, as selection
of (more employable) candidates was done on employer initiative.
Education programmes on the average turned out to reduce probability of
leaving unemployment for a year after participation (due to programme
effect), and within the two years (maximal observed time span)
probability of being unemployed for participants of training programmes
was about the same (or minimally lower) than for comparable
non-participants. However, education measures turned to be more
effective when certain subpopulations were observed: persons without
upper secondary education, persons who entered unemployment from
inactivity (not regular education) and among persons who have not spent
a very long period in unemployment prior to participation. Participation
in public work programmes was estimated to have increased mid-term
unemployment risk for participants, but this has to be understood
through both programme effect and selection of the most vulnerable
unemployed in public works. Additionally, higher probability of being in
unemployment among public work participants when compared to controls
can be interpreted in terms of activation - if they did not participate
in public work, more of them might have left unemployment for inactivity
(which likely happened to many statistical twins with whom they were
matched). In conclusion, the number of persons who were estimated not to
be in unemployment due to ALMP participation compared with total funding
in order to estimate efficiency of spending for each ALMP was evaluated.'
author: Matkovic, Teo and Babic, Zdenko and Vuga, Annamaria
author_list:
- family: Matkovic
given: Teo
- family: Babic
given: Zdenko
- family: Vuga
given: Annamaria
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.3935/rsp.v19i3.1100
eissn: 1845-6014
files: []
issn: 1330-2965
journal: REVIJA ZA SOCIJALNU POLITIKU
keywords: active labour market policies; evaluation
language: Croatian
month: NOV
number: '3'
number-of-cited-references: '28'
orcid-numbers: Babic, Zdenko/0000-0002-3896-8688
pages: 303-336
papis_id: d94c7794179ee55717ccf71368f80b09
ref: Matkovic2012evaluationactive
researcherid-numbers: Babic, Zdenko/A-5785-2012
times-cited: '5'
title: EVALUATION OF ACTIVE LABOUR MARKET POLICIES IN 2009 AND 2010 IN THE REPUBLIC
OF CROATIA
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000311973700004
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '26'
volume: '19'
web-of-science-categories: Social Issues
year: '2012'