Public employment programs may affect poverty both directly through the income they provide and indirectly through general equilibrium effects. We estimate both effects, exploiting a reform that improved the implementation of India's National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) and whose rollout was randomized at a large (sub‐district) scale. The reform raised beneficiary households' earnings by 14%, and reduced poverty by 26%. Importantly, 86% of income gains came from non‐program earnings, driven by higher private‐sector (real) wages and employment. This pattern appears to reflect imperfectly competitive labor markets more than productivity gains: worker's reservation wages increased, land returns fell, and employment gains were higher in villages with more concentrated landholdings. Non‐agricultural enterprise counts and employment grew rapidly despite higher wages, consistent with a role for local demand in structural transformation. These results suggest that public employment programs can effectively reduce poverty in developing countries, and may also improve economic efficiency.
MLA
Muralidharan, Karthik, et al. “General equilibrium effects of (improving) public employment programs: experimental evidence from India.” Econometrica, vol. 91, .no 4, Econometric Society, 2023, pp. 1261-1295, https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA18181
Chicago
Muralidharan, Karthik, Paul Niehaus, and Sandip Sukhtankar. “General equilibrium effects of (improving) public employment programs: experimental evidence from India.” Econometrica, 91, .no 4, (Econometric Society: 2023), 1261-1295. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA18181
APA
Muralidharan, K., Niehaus, P., & Sukhtankar, S. (2023). General equilibrium effects of (improving) public employment programs: experimental evidence from India. Econometrica, 91(4), 1261-1295. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA18181
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