Integrated Youth Employment Programs : A Stocktake of Evidence on What Works in Youth Employment Programs

This Note is a stocktake summarizing evidence on “what works” in youth employment programs on both the supply and demand side. Employment outcomes refer both to direct and indirect job creation, including through firm start-up, as well as improvements in the quality of jobs as manifested in higher earnings as self-employment or increases in household income. This paper is based on an extensive desk literature review and analyzes the major meta-analysis and literature reviews on both the labor demand side and labor supply side.The supply side has a large body of evidence and evaluations of the whole Active Labor Market Policies (ALMPs) package as a whole. Kluve et al. (2016) and McKenzie, D. (2017) have a rigorous methodology and provide wide analysis and recommendations of the major studies on the supply side and provide the basis for that section. We supplement this information with key studies which had Randomized Control Trials (RCTs) or rigorous evaluations.In some sense the supply side stocktake is an analysis of a few existing meta analyses complemented by key studies not included in the meta-analysis. On the demand side the evidence base on what works for jobs outcomes is weak – so we used an extensive desk literature review. We include meta analysis where they exist for sections of the demand package (for example micro-credit). For both the supply and demand side, the team worked with experts across thematic areas (Agriculture, Social Protection, Entrepreneurship, Social Development and Urban Development) to ensure we had a mix of literature from the diverse thematic bodies included. The note does not look at evidence on policy reforms that address systemic problems. We recognize that rural and urban investment climates, regulatory frameworks, the overall macro-economic framework, human capital (education and training policy, basic health), are prerequisites for many interventions on the demand side of the labor market to be successful. In what follows, these fundamentals are taken as given and the note focuses primarily on interventions with specific identifiable enterprise, firm or farm beneficiaries, rather than broad investment climate reforms.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Datta, Namita, Assy, Angela Elzir, Buba, Johanne, Johansson De Silva, Sara, Watson, Samantha
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:YOUTH EMPLOYMENT, JOB CREATION, SKILLS DEVELOPMENT, EMPLOYMENT SERVICE, SUBSIDIES, SME FINANCE, SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES, LABOR MARKET, ENTREPRENEURSHIP,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/307301552636285526/Integrated-Youth-Employment-Programs-A-Stocktake-of-Evidence-on-What-Works-in-Youth-Employment-Programs
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31424
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