Econometric analysis of labour market interventions
Authors: Matthew Webb
Overview
Abstract (English)
This thesis involves three essays that explore the theory and application of econometric analysis to labour market interventions. One essay is methodological, and two essays are applications. The first essay contributes to the literature on inference with data sets containing within-cluster correlation. The essay highlights a problem with current practices when the number of clusters is 11 or fewer. Current practices can result in p-values that are not point identified but are instead p-value intervals. The chapter provides Monte Carlo evidence to support a proposed solution to this problem. The second essay analyzes a labour market intervention within Canada–the Youth Hires program–which aimed to reduce youth unemployment. We find evidence that the program was able to increase employment among the targeted group. However, the impacts are only present for males, and we find evidence of displacement effects amongst the non-targeted group. The third essay examines a set of Graduate Retention Programs that several Canadian provinces offer. These programs are aimed at mitigating future skill shortages. Once the solution proposed in the first essay is applied, I find little evidence of the effectiveness of these programs in attracting or retaining recent graduates.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | PhD dissertation |
---|---|
Author | Matthew Webb |
Publication Year | 2013 |
Title | Econometric analysis of labour market interventions |
City | Kingston, ON |
Department | Department of Economics |
University | Queen's University |
Publication Language | English |
- Matthew Webb
- Econometric analysis of labour market interventions
- Matthew Webb
- Queen's University
- 2013