- Title
- Do Financial Incentives Encourage Welfare Recipients to Work? Early Findings from the Canadian Self Sufficiency Project
- Author(s)
- David Card David Card (Princeton University)
- Philip K. Robins Philip Robins (University of Miami)
- Abstract
- This paper presents results from an experimental evaluation of an earnings supplement program offered to long-term welfare recipients in two Canadian provinces. The program -- known as the Self-Sufficiency Project - provides a supplement equal to one-half of the difference between an earnings target ($2,500 or $3083 per month, Canadian dollars, depending on the province) and the individual's actual earnings. The supplement is similar to a negative income tax with two important differences: (1) eligibility is limited to long-term welfare recipients who find a full-time job (30 hours per week or more); and (2) the supplement payment is based on individual earnings rather than family income. The evaluation is based on a randomized design that will follow 6,000 individuals for 5 years. Early findings for a first cohort of 2,000 individuals observed over 18 months of program eligibility suggest that the financial incentives of the Self-Sufficiency Program significantly increase labor market attachment and significantly reduce welfare participation.
- Creation Date
- 1996-03
- Section URL ID
- IRS
- Paper Number
- 359
- URL
- https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01t148fh15n/1/359.pdf
- File Function
- Jel
- C62, C63
- Keyword(s)
- welfare, social experiment, labor supply, Canada
- Suppress
- false
- Series
- 1