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Title: Does the Public Employment Service Affect Search Effort and Outcomes?
Author(s): Denis Fougère, Jacqueline Pradel and Muriel Roger
Publication Date: December 2008
Keyword(s): job search, public employment agency, search intensity and simulated maximum likelihood
Programme Area(s): Labour Economics
Abstract: In this paper, we examine the disincentive effects of the public employment service on the search effort of unemployed workers and on their exit rate from unemployment. For that purpose, we specify a structural search model with fixed and variable costs of search in which unemployed workers select their optimal search intensity given the exogenous arrival rate of job contacts coming from the public employment agency. Because the theoretical effect of an increase in this exogenous job contact arrival rate on the structural exit rate from unemployment is ambiguous, we estimate this model using individual unemployment duration data. Our results show that the exit rate from unemployment increases with the arrival rate of job contacts obtained by the public employment service, especially for low-educated and low-skilled workers. They also show that the search effort is more costly for low-educated women and low-skilled adult unemployed workers. This last result suggests that a public employment agency that matches searchers and employers is beneficial, in the sense that it saves searchers in terms of search costs they would otherwise bear.
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Bibliographic Reference
Fougère, D, Pradel, J and Roger, M. 2008. 'Does the Public Employment Service Affect Search Effort and Outcomes?'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=7095