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Active labor market programs’ effects on entrepreneurship and unemployment
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Active labor market programs’ effects on entrepreneurship and unemployment

Catherine Laffineur, Saulo Dubard-Barbosa, Alain Fayolle and Emeran Nziali
Small Business Economics, Vol.49(4), pp.889-918
01/12/2017

Abstract

entrepreneurship Active labor market programs Start-up incentives Unemployment benefits Unemployment
Many countries are turning to active labor market programs (ALMP) to increase individuals’ incentive to start a business and to reduce unemployment, but research on the effectiveness of such programs has produced mixed results and is still inconclusive at the macroeconomic level. This article examines the importance of ALMP targeted at entrepreneurship to explain cross-country differences in aggregate entrepreneurship rate. By using GEM data over the period 2002–2013 on OECD countries, our results show a positive impact of ALMP on the rate of necessity entrepreneurship but no significant effect on the rate of opportunity entrepreneurship. We further established that generous unemployment benefits reduce the positive outcome of ALMP on the aggregate rate of necessity entrepreneurship. Moreover, because most businesses started out of necessity do not create new jobs, we find that the economic spin-off of such programs in terms of unemployment reduction is very limited.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.726 Entrepreneurship
Web of Science research areas
Business
Economics
Management
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