Can business input improve the effectiveness of worker training?: evidence from Brazil's Pronatec-MDIC
This study evaluates the employment effects of a publicly-run national technical vocational education training program in Brazil that explicitly takes input from firms in determining the location, scale, and skill content of courses offered. Using exogenous course capacity restrictions, the study finds that those completing the course following receipt of a course offer have an 8.6 per cent increase in employment over the year following course completion. These effects come from previously unemployed trainees who find employment at non-requesting firms. The demand-driven program's effects are ... Show more
Authors: O'Connell, Stephen D.; Mation, Lucas Ferreira; Basto, Joao Bevilaqua T.; Dutz, Mark A.
Published: Washington, District of Columbia, World Bank, 2017
Resource type: Report, paper or authored book
Physical description: 60 p.
Access item:
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/444871501522977352/Can-business-input-improve-the-effectiveness-of-worker-training-evidence-from-Brazils-Pronatec-MDIC