The Net Impact of Active Labour Programmes in Hungary and Poland

Upjohn Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3372-7527

Publication Date

1998

Source

International Labour Review 137(3): 321-346

Abstract

As do many countries, Hungary and Poland provide unemployment compensation and active labour programmes for the unemployed. This article reports on follow-up surveys of participants in retraining, public works, subsidized employment and self-employment programmes compared to non-participants. Preliminary results show a positive net impact of most of these programmes plus benefits from using the employment services, but strong evidence of non-random assignment to programmes signals the need to examine the findings further. Such evaluations provide necessary feedback on the effective use of public resources, though of course the programmes serve multiple objectives, political as well as economic and social.

Publisher

International Labour Organization

Subject Areas

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES; International labor comparisons; Program development and evaluation; UNEMPLOYMENT, DISABILITY, and INCOME SUPPORT PROGRAMS; Unemployment insurance; WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT; Public training programs

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Citation

O'Leary, Christopher J., Piotr Kolodziejczyk, and György Lázár. 1998. "The Net Impact of Active Labour Programmes in Hungary and Poland." International Labour Review 137(3): 321-346.