Discussion paper

DP13136 Anonymity or Distance? Job Search and Labour Market Exclusion in a Growing African City

We show that helping young job-seekers to signal their skills to employers can generate large and persistent improvements in labour market outcomes. We do this by comparing an
intervention that improves the ability to signal skills (the ‘job application workshop’) to a transport subsidy treatment designed to reduce the cost of job search. We find that in the shortrun both interventions have large positive effects on the probability of finding formal jobs. The workshop also increases the probability of having a stable job with an open-ended contract. Four years later, the workshop significantly increases earnings, job satisfaction and employment duration, while the effects of the transport subsidy have dissipated. These gains are concentrated among groups who generally have worse labour market outcomes. Overall, our findings highlight that young people possess valuable skills that are unobservable to employers. Making these skills observable generates earning gains that are far greater than the cost of the intervention.

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Citation

Abebe, G, S Caria, M Fafchamps, P Falco, S Franklin and S Quinn (2018), ‘DP13136 Anonymity or Distance? Job Search and Labour Market Exclusion in a Growing African City‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 13136. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp13136