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Appropriate timing and targeting of activation
programs for the unemployed can help improve their cost-effectiveness
Activation programs, such as job search
assistance, training, or work experience programs for unemployed workers,
typically initially produce negative employment effects. These so-called
“lock-in effects” occur because participants spend less time and effort on
job search activities than non-participants. Lock-in effects need to be
offset by sufficiently large post-participation employment or earnings for
the programs to be cost-effective. They represent key indirect costs that
are often more important than direct program costs. The right timing and
targeting of these programs can improve their cost-effectiveness by reducing
lock-in effects.
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Do unemployment benefits help those seeking work
to obtain better jobs?
Unemployment insurance schemes face a well-known
trade-off between providing income support to those out of work and reducing
their incentive to look for work. This trade-off between benefits and
incentives is central to the public debate about extending benefit periods
during the recent economic crisis. Often overlooked in this debate is that
such support can increase the quality of the work found by the unemployed.
This quality rise, in terms of both wages and duration, can be achieved by
increasing the time and resources available to an individual to obtain a
better job.
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Grants and training programs are great complements to
social assistance to help people out of poverty
Productive inclusion programs provide an integrated
package of services, such as grants and training, to promote self-employment and wage
employment among the poor. They show promising long-term impacts, and are often proposed
as a way to graduate the poor out of social assistance. Nevertheless, neither productive
inclusion nor social assistance will be able to solve the broader poverty challenge
independently. Rather, the future is in integrating productive inclusion into the
existing social assistance system, though this poses several design, coordination, and
implementation challenges.
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Uncoordinated unemployment insurance and
severance pay do a poor job of insuring against losses resulting from job
displacement
Job displacement poses a serious earnings threat
to long-tenured workers through unemployment spells and lower re-employment
wages. The prevailing method of insuring job displacement losses involves an
uncoordinated combination of unemployment insurance and severance pay. Less
developed countries often rely exclusively on public mandating of employer
severance pay due to the administrative complexity of unemployment insurance
systems. If both options are operational, systematic integration of the two
is important, although perhaps not possible if severance pay is voluntarily
provided.
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Wage losses upon re-employment can seriously harm
long-tenured displaced workers if they are not properly insured
Job displacement represents a serious earnings risk to
long-tenured workers through lower re-employment wages, and these losses may persist for
many years. Moreover, this risk is often poorly insured, although not for a lack of
policy interest. To reduce this risk, most countries mandate scheduled wage insurance
(severance pay), and it is voluntarily provided in others. Actual-loss wage insurance is
uncommon, although perceived difficulties may be overplayed. Both approaches offer the
hope of greater consumption smoothing, with actual-loss plans carrying greater
promise.
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The challenge of unemployment benefits is to
protect workers while minimizing undesirable side effects
All developed economies have unemployment benefit
programs to protect workers against major income losses during spells of
unemployment. By enabling unemployed workers to meet basic consumption
needs, the programs protect workers from having to sell their assets or
accept jobs below their qualifications. The programs also help stabilize the
economy during recessions. If benefits are too generous, however, the
programs can lengthen unemployment and raise the unemployment rate. The
policy challenge is to protect workers while minimizing undesirable side
effects.
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Disability is associated with labor market
disadvantage; evidence points to this being a causal relationship
In Europe, about one in eight people of working
age report having a disability; that is, a long-term limiting health
condition. Despite the introduction of a range of legislative and policy
initiatives designed to eliminate discrimination and facilitate retention of
and entry into work, disability is associated with substantial and enduring
labor market disadvantage in many countries. Identifying the reasons for
this is complex, but critical to determine effective policy solutions that
reduce the extent, and social and economic costs, of disability-related
disadvantage.
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EU supranational policies should be more active
at promoting institutional reforms that reduce unemployment
Unemployment in Europe is excessively high on
average, and is divergent across countries and population groups within
countries. On the one hand, over the past decades, national governments have
implemented incomplete institutional reforms to amend dysfunctional labor
markets. On the other hand, EU supranational policies—those that transcend
national boundaries and governments—have offered only limited financial
support for active labor market policies, instead of promoting structural
reforms aimed at improving the functioning of European labor markets. Better
coordination and a wider scope of EU supranational policies is needed to
fight unemployment more effectively.
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Minimum pension programs reduce poverty in old
age but they can also reduce the labor supply of low-income workers
The main purpose of minimum pension benefit
programs and old-age social assistance programs is to guarantee a minimum
standard of living after retirement and thus to alleviate poverty in old
age. In many developing and developed countries, the minimum pension program
is a key welfare program and a major influence on the retirement decisions
of low-income workers and workers with erratic work histories. The design of
many minimum pension programs tends to create strong incentives for
low-income workers to retire as soon as they become eligible for the
program, which is often earlier than the normal retirement age.
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