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Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

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This presentation is part of the programme of the International Seminar "Social Protection, Entrepreneurship and Labour Market Activation: Evidence for Better Policies", organized by the International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (IPC-IG/UNDP) together with Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the Colombian Think Tank Fedesarrollo held on September 10-11 at the Ipea Auditorium in Brasilia.
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Social protection, entrepreneurship and labour market activation Brasilia, september 2014 Social Protection and Labour Market Impacts in Argentina Leonardo Gasparini Santiago Garganta with the support of
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Page 1: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Social protection, entrepreneurship and labour market activation

Brasilia, september 2014

Social Protection and

Labour Market Impacts in Argentina

Leonardo Gasparini Santiago Garganta

with the support of

Page 2: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Social protection in Argentina

• Broad coverage for formal workers • Increasing but still partial coverage of

informal workers. • Two flagship programs (since late 2000s)

o Moratoria: non-contributory pensions

o Asignación Universal por Hijo (AUH): CCT

Page 3: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Characteristics of AUH

• Monthly cash subsidy per child (around USD 50)

• Conditions • Parents should be unemployed or informal (unregistered) • Children under 18 • Compliance with education and health requirements

Page 4: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

AUH is a large program • In terms of participants

o 30% of all children in the country o 90% of children in poorest deciles

• In terms of budget o 0.8 % of GDP

• In terms of the subsidy o Benefit per child represents

15% of mean hh income in poorest three deciles

Large compared to other programs in Argentina (Cruces and Gasparini, 2012) and to other Latin American CCTs (Stampini and Tornarolli, 2012)

Page 5: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Available data is scarce

• Not an RCT • No microdata available from the Program • National household survey (EPH): not a specific

question on AUH but can trace the subsidy with other questions

Page 6: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Large impact on poverty and inequality

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

1 2 3 4 5

Distribution of participants by quintile Reduction in poverty (line= USD 4 PPP)

Reduction in inequality

-13%

-24%

-30% -35%

-30%

-25%

-20%

-15%

-10%

-5%

0%FGT (0) FGT (1) FGT (2)

-2%

-13% -14%

-12%

-10%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%Gini Ratio decil 10/1

Larger impact than the average in Latin America (Cruces and Gasparini, 2012).

Page 7: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

The debate on unintended outcomes

• Ample support to the program but debate over some unintended outcomes: o Labour informality o Labour force participation

• Our research:

• look for signs of unintended outcomes • using diff-in-diff • exploiting the short panel structure of EPH

Page 8: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Incentives against formalization?

• Universal coverage initiatives may deteriorate the incentives to participate in the formal labor market (Galiani and Weinschelbaum (2012), Levy (2008), Antón et al. (2012))

• The presence of the program could • change decision between self-employment and formal job

• reduce bargaining power of informal workers against their employers

• The practical relevance of the potential disincentives can only be determined with empirical evidence.

Page 9: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Incentives against formalization? Transitions to formality

Informal workers in poor households

Source: Garganta and Gasparini (2014).

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

2005-2006 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009 2009-2010 2010-2011

Without children

With children

Before-program

Page 10: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Incentives against formalization Transitions to formality

Informal workers in poor households

Source: Garganta and Gasparini (2014).

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

2005-2006 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009 2009-2010 2010-2011

With children

Without children

Before-program After-program

Page 11: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

The effect on labour informality

(1) (2) (3)

With_Children * After -0.0765*** -0.0695*** -0.0821***(0.0184) (0.0167) (0.0257)

With_Children (H ) 0.0385*** 0.0472*** 0.0562***(0.0123) (0.0132) (0.0155)

After (Post ) 0.108*** 0.152*** 0.186***(0.0276) (0.0229) (0.0399)

With controls, time and regional dummies No Yes YesExcluding the unemployed No No YesObservations 16,635 16,635 13,777Pseudo R2 0.005 0.086 0.095

Size: estimates represent a mean reduction of around 30% in the probability of formalization for the treatment group

Page 12: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Robust to various checks

Using also

All 1 child 3 children Matching Discontinuity semester 2 2007 2008

(i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) (vi) (vii) (viii)

With_Children * After -0.0894** -0.0610** -0.0895** -0.0977*** -0.0534* -0.0612*** -0.00928 0.0259(0.0353) (0.0266) (0.0358) (0.0379) (0.0301) (0.0203) (0.0346) (0.0272)

With_Children (H ) 0.0744*** 0.0323 0.0631*** 0.0488 0.0199 0.0475*** 0.0410* 0.0457**(0.0164) (0.0237) (0.0234) (0.0352) (0.0205) (0.0118) (0.0245) (0.0193)

After (Post ) 0.211*** 0.171*** 0.212*** 0.233*** -0.0127 0.0584** 0.0849** 0.0298(0.0579) (0.0528) (0.0583) (0.0597) (0.0317) (0.0247) (0.0377) (0.0361)

Controls Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesObservations 10,057 3,258 7,738 5,571 1,732 22,995 6992 9094Pseudo R2 0.099 0.114 0.102 0.114 0.126 0.087 0.1152 0.1017

Restricted sample: age (25-55) False experiments: intervention in

Page 13: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Effect is decreasing in the age of the child

0-5 6-10 11-14 15-17 Disabled

With_Children * After -0.0876*** -0.0707*** -0.0689** -0.0551* -0.0840**(0.0258) (0.0255) (0.0326) (0.0317) (0.0339)

With_Children (H) 0.0531** 0.0584** 0.0505 0.0318 0.0165(0.0219) (0.0273) (0.0598) (0.0599) (0.0306)

After (Post) 0.185*** 0.181*** 0.155*** 0.212*** 0.179***(0.0416) (0.0399) (0.0368) (0.0456) (0.0386)

Controls yes yes yes yes yesObservations 8,159 4,843 3,661 3,037 2,921Pseudo R2 0.1002 0.1142 0.1008 0.1269 0.1023

Age of youngest child

Page 14: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

No effect for secondary workers with formalized primary worker

Primary Secondary Informal primary worker Formal primary worker(i) (ii) (iii) (iv)

With_Children * After -0.100** -0.0609** -0.0472* -0.0902(0.0393) (0.0262) (0.0277) (0.0644)

With_Children (H ) 0.0919*** 0.0174 0.0223 -0.175(0.0191) (0.0216) (0.0203) (0.152)

After (Post ) 0.206*** 0.173*** 0.153*** 0.188*(0.0536) (0.0420) (0.0340) (0.102)

Controls Yes Yes Yes YesObservations 7,494 6,283 5,732 542Pseudo R2 0.091 0.092 0.101 0.186

Type of worker Secondary worker

Page 15: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

No evidence for transition to informality

Poorest 30% Poorest 20% Poorest 40%

With_Children * After 0.0692 0.0391 -0.0271(0.0518) (0.0726) (0.0277)

With_Children (H ) -0.0175 -0.0167 -0.0298(0.0268) (0.0562) (0.0298)

After (Post ) -0.0343 0.00902 0.0115(0.0494) (0.0685) (0.0323)

Controls Yes Yes YesObservations 4,883 2,261 8,011Pseudo R2 0.004 0.054 0.031

Page 16: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Labour force participation Is the program discouraging people from participating in the labour market?

o Negative, but small, effect for women o No effect for males

Females MalesTreat * After -0.0168* -0.00285

(0.00878) (0.0121)Treat 0.0307** -0.0207

(0.0125) (0.0134)After -0.00911 -0.0680

(0.0181) (0.0420)

Individual Characteristics Yes YesRegional and time dummies Yes Yes

Page 17: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Concluding remarks

• Need a more open and richer debate on labor

incentives of AUH

o More evidence on existing programs

o Interpretation of evidence

o Discussion on alternative designs

Page 18: Leonardo Gasparini & Santiago Garganta: Social protection and

Thanks!


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