Title
An Evaluation of the Swedish Active Labor Market Policy: New and Received Wisdom
Author(s)
Anders Forslund Anders Forslund (Uppsala University)
Alan B. Krueger Alan Krueger (Princeton University and NBER)
Abstract
About 3% of GNP is spent on government labor market programs in Sweden, compared to 2% in Germany and less than 0.5% in the U.S. In Sweden these programs include extensive job training, public sector relief work, recruitment subsidies, youth programs, mobility bonuses, and unemployment benefits. Using county-level data, we provide new evidence that public relief workers displace other workers, especially in the construction sector. Our review of the previous literature suggests that job training programs have small effects on wages and re-employment in Sweden, but precise inferences are difficult because of small sample sizes. We also investigate alternative reasons for the stability of the Beveridge Curve in Sweden, and compare regional evolutions of employment and unemployment in Sweden and the U.S. Lastly, we present cross-country analysis for 1993 which, contrary to studies that use earlier data, shows that the extent of a country's active labor market programs is positively associated with the national unemployment rate.
Creation Date
1994-07
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
332
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01rj430453h/1/332.pdf
File Function
Jel
C25
Keyword(s)
Sweden, labor market, active labor market programs
Suppress
false
Series
1