Active labor market policies
The economics of active labor market policies (ALMPs) focuses on analyzing the effectiveness and economic impact of government interventions aimed at improving employment outcomes and labor market efficiency. ALMPs encompass a range of policies and programs designed to enhance labor market functioning, facilitate job creation, and support job seekers in finding suitable employment. It helps policymakers and researchers understand the economic mechanisms, challenges, and best practices associated with ALMPs, informing evidence-based decision-making and the design of effective labor market policy interventions.
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Public or private job placement services — Are private ones more effective? Updated
Outsourcing to the private sector can only be effective if the service quality can be contracted on
Gesine Stephan, May 2024Expenditures on job placement and related services make up a substantial share of many countries’ gross domestic products. Contracting out to private providers is often proposed as a cost-efficient alternative to the state provision of placement services. However, the responsible state agency has to be able and willing to design and monitor sufficiently complete contracts to ensure that the private contractors deliver the desired service quality. None of the empirical evidence indicates that contracting-out is necessarily more effective or more cost-efficient than public employment services.MoreLess -
Rethinking the skills gap Updated
Better understanding of skills mismatch is essential to finding effective policy options
Evidence suggests that productivity would be much higher and unemployment much lower if the supply of and demand for skills were better matched. As a result, skills mismatch between workers (supply) and jobs (demand) commands the ongoing attention of policymakers in many countries. Policies intended to address the persistence of skills mismatch focus on the supply side of the issue by emphasizing worker education and training. However, the role of the demand side, that is, employers’ rigid skill requirements, garners comparatively little policy attention.MoreLess -
Maternity leave versus early childcare—What are the long-term consequences for children? Updated
Despite increasingly generous parental leave schemes their advantages over subsidized childcare remain unclear
Nabanita Datta GuptaJonas Jessen, May 2023There is growing agreement among parents in high-income countries that having a working mother does not harm a preschool child. Yet, research is ongoing on what the long-term effects on children are of being looked after at home (primarily by their mothers) or in childcare. Most studies find positive effects of childcare on child outcomes for children from disadvantaged backgrounds and moderate effects for children from more advantaged backgrounds. Policymakers need to improve compensation and the working environment for the sector if a high quality level is to be achieved and if the beneficial effects are to be maintained.MoreLess -
Evaluating apprenticeship training programs for firms
Cost–benefit surveys of employers help design more effective training policies
Samuel MuehlemannHarald Pfeifer, March 2023Apprenticeship training programs typically last several years and require substantial investments by training firms, largely due to the associated labor costs for participants and instructors. Nevertheless, apprentices also add significant value in the workplace. One tool to measure the costs and benefits of training for firms is employer surveys, which were first introduced in the 1970s in Germany. Such cost–benefit surveys (CBS) help to better understand a firm's demand for apprentices and to identify market failures. Therefore, CBS are an important tool for designing effective training policies.MoreLess -
Job search requirements for older unemployed workers Updated
Search requirements for the older unemployed affect their re-employment rates and their flows into states of inactivity
Hans Bloemen, November 2022Many OECD countries have, or have had, a policy that exempts older unemployed people from the requirement to search for a job. An aging population and low participation by older workers in the labor market increasingly put public finances under strain, and spur calls for policy measures that activate labor force participation by older workers. Introducing job search requirements for older unemployed workers aims to increase their re-employment rates. Abolishing the exemption from job search requirements for the older unemployed has been shown to initiate higher outflow rates from unemployment for them.MoreLess -
Parental leave and maternal labor supply Updated
Parental leave increases the family–work balance, but prolonged leave may have negative impacts on mothers’ careers
Astrid Kunze, June 2022Numerous studies have investigated whether the provision and generosity of parental leave affects the employment and career prospects of women. Parental leave systems typically provide either short unpaid leave mandated by the firm, as in the US, or more generous and universal leave mandated by the government, as in Canada and several European countries. Key economic policy questions include whether, at the macro level, female employment rates have increased due to parental leave policies; and, at the micro level, whether the probability of returning to work and career prospects have increased for mothers after childbirth.MoreLess