Hiring young, unskilled workers on subsidized open-ended contracts: a good integration programme?
Roger, Muriel ; Zamora, Philippe
Oxford Review of Economic Policy
2011
27
2
Summer
380-396
activation ; comparison ; economic recession ; employment security ; fixed term labour contract ; statistics ; unemployment ; youth employment ; youth unemployment ; labour market policy ; employment subsidy
Unemployment
https://academic.oup.com/oxrep/issue
English
Bibliogr.
"Young labour-market entrants account for a high level of unemployment and short-term contracts. In July 2002, the French government moved to reduce this insecurity at the start of working life by introducing the Youth-in-business Contract (Contrat Jeune en Entreprise), a new contract for young people under 22 years old who dropped out of school before passing their final secondary school examinations. Under this scheme, firms were entitled to claim a subsidy when they hired an eligible young worker on an open-ended contract. We assess the impact of the Youth-in-business Contract on transitions to permanent employment by estimating a dynamic difference-in-difference model drawing on the French Labour Force Survey. We use a new method, inspired by Keane and Sauer (2009), to deal with measurement errors in the data. We find that programme eligibility has no effect on transitions to permanent employment in a recession environment."
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