- Home
- Publications
- Does Welfare-to-work Policy Increase Employment?: Evidence From The UK New Deal For Young People
Does welfare-to-work policy increase employment?: Evidence from the UK New Deal for Young People
Welfare-to-work programmes were implemented in several OECD countries during the 1990s. With these programmes, entitlement to unemployment related benefits is conditional on taking up help in finding and actively preparing for work. This paper examines empirically the employment effects of the New Deal for Young People, a welfare-to-work programme for long-term unemployed young people introduced in the UK in 1998. It finds that the programme has reduced measured unemployment among the target group partly by shifting them into non-work activities but also by raising employment.
Related Blog Posts
Breaking Down the Different Types of Pension in the UK
Robyn Smith
Adrian Pabst
25 Mar 2024
6 min read
What Are the Implications of the Rising National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage Rates?
Ekaterina Aleynikova
Adrian Pabst
19 Mar 2024
5 min read
How Changes in Migration Policy Could Boost Scotland’s Economy
Max Mosley
Ekaterina Aleynikova
18 Dec 2023
3 min read
Related Projects
Related News
Press Release: Compositional effects push up average weekly earnings at the end of 2020
26 Jan 2021
2 min read
Press Release: 2020 shaping up to be the worst year for total pay growth since 2009
15 Dec 2020
2 min read
Related Publications
The Nature of the Inflationary Surprise in Europe and the USA
21 Mar 2024
Discussion Papers
Pay-Setting Among Employers in the Agriculture, Cleaning, Hospitality and Retail Sectors
11 Mar 2024
Research Report
Energy and Climate Policy in a DSGE Model of the United Kingdom
08 Mar 2024
Discussion Papers
Job Boom or Job Bust? The Effect of the Pandemic on Actual and Measured Job and Employment Growth
07 Feb 2024
UK Economic Outlook Box Analysis