Heterogeneous treatment and self-selection in a wage subsidy experiment
Authors: Dany Brouillette and Guy Lacroix
Overview
Abstract (English)
The Self-Sufficiency Project (SSP) is a research and demonstration project that offered a generous timelimited income supplement to randomly selected welfare applicants under two conditions. The first, the eligibility condition, required that they remain on welfare for at least 12 months. The second, the qualification condition, required that they find a full-time job within 12 months after establishing eligibility. In this paper we focus on a neglected and important feature of the program, namely that the financial reward for becoming qualified is inversely related to the expected wage rate. Under very simple assumptions we show that those who have a low expected wage rate have a clear incentive to establish eligibility. Empirical non-parametric evidence strongly suggests that individuals self-select into eligibility. We jointly estimate a participation equation and a wage equation that are correlated through individual random effects. Our results show that the omission of self-selectivity into qualification translates into slightly underestimated treatment effects.
Abstract (French)
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Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Dany Brouillette and Guy Lacroix |
Publication Year | 2011 |
Title | Heterogeneous treatment and self-selection in a wage subsidy experiment |
Volume | 94 |
Journal Name | Journal of Public Economics |
Number | 7 |
Pages | 479-492 |
Publication Language | English |
- Dany Brouillette
- Dany Brouillette and Guy Lacroix
- Heterogeneous treatment and self-selection in a wage subsidy experiment
- Journal of Public Economics
- 94
- 2011
- 7
- 479-492