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Adam Ayaita, Christian Grund, Lisa Pütz
In: Schmalenbach Journal of Business Research 74 (2022), 2, 137-162
Employment agencies aim to match individuals to appropriate jobs. There are public and private employment agencies, which co-exist in many countries. Selection effects may be relevant in the sense that private agencies potentially engage in ‘cream-skimming’ by prioritizing highly qualified workers. The resulting job match quality is also important from an individual, a firm, and a society perspective. We examine the selection into job placement via private and public employment agencies as well as the resulting job match qualities, taking a job-market reform in Germany into account: the introduction of vouchers for private job placements. Using representative German panel data, we find that cream-skimming is significantly less pronounced under the voucher policy, as private agencies shift the focus toward unemployed individuals with a voucher. In addition, we find evidence based on propensity score matching estimations that private agencies tend to create better matches than their public counterparts.
Themen: Arbeit und Beschäftigung
Keywords: cream-skimming; employment agencies; job match quality; job placement; job search; vouchers
Externer Link:
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s41471-021-00129-1.pdf
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41471-021-00129-1