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Book
Mobility, Scarring and Job Quality in Indonesia's Labor Market
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2015 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Abstract

This paper investigates the occupational mobility and job quality of young people in Indonesia and relates this to the concept of "scarring." The concept of labor market scarring in this paper is the occurrence of low or zero returns to certain types of work (for example, self-employment). Scarring is expected to occur whenever an individual spends periods working in occupations in which their human capital is either stagnant or deteriorating. Fixed effects estimations using panel data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey reveal that a period in self-employment is associated with negative returns for youth (about 3 to 4 percent per year penalty), but not for older adults. In addition, there are clear patterns of persistence in self-employment over time with few individuals progressing from petty self-employment to businesses with permanent workers.

Keywords

Adult males --- Aggregate unemployment --- Casual worker --- College graduate --- Contingent workers --- Displaced workers --- Earning --- Earnings losses --- Educational attainment --- Employee --- Employment outcomes --- Employment probability --- Employment prospects --- Employment status --- Expected wages --- Family labor --- Full time job --- Health insurance --- Household characteristics --- Human capital --- Human resource --- Informal employment --- Informal sector --- Job --- Job creation --- Job match --- Job search --- Job security --- Job separation --- Job status --- Job training --- Labor --- Labor contract --- Labor economics --- Labor force --- Labor management & relations --- Labor market --- Labor market characteristics --- Labor market experience --- Labor market outcomes --- Labor market segmentation --- Labor markets --- Labor policies --- Labor productivity --- Labor relations --- Labor standards --- Labour --- Labour market --- Long term wage --- Occupational mobility --- Older workers --- Permanent employment --- Permanent worker --- Permanent workers --- Private sector --- Private sector workers --- Public sector employment --- Safety net --- Salaried employment --- Self-employed --- Self-employment --- Social protections and labor --- Temporary work --- Temporary workers --- Unemployed --- Unemployed individual --- Unemployed youth --- Unemployment --- Unemployment rate --- Wage differentials --- Wage effects --- Wage employment --- Wage growth --- Wage impact --- Wage rates --- Wage sector --- Wage subsidies --- Work experience --- Worker --- Workers --- Working conditions --- Youth employment --- Youth unemployment


Book
Can Public Works Programs Reduce Youth Crime? Evidence from Papua New Guinea's Urban Youth Employment Project
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2017 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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Abstract

Crime rates in Papua New Guinea's capital city of Port Moresby are among the highest in the world. Few youth work, and good jobs are scarce. In 2013, the National Capital District Commission partnered with the World Bank to implement the Urban Youth Employment Project. The project offers out-of-school and out-of-work youth two months of public works employment or, for academically qualified candidates, six months of classroom and on-the-job training. This paper presents difference-in-difference estimates of project impacts on participants' social and criminal behavior, 12 to 18 months after completion. The control group consists of observably similar youth living in areas not served by the program. Project participants became less likely to hang out with friends at night, have a best friend involved in crime, and have friends involved in fights or robberies. The program also increased subsequent employment rates, and significantly reduced aggressive behavior and gratuitous property damage. However, there is little robust evidence that the program reduced participants' engagement in or exposure to crime. The study concludes that the program had strong and healthy effects on participants' peer group and behavior, but more limited effects on the socioeconomic causes of crime.

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