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Going, Going...Gone? Workforce Development Programs for the Poor Since the War on Poverty. Harry J. Holzer Georgetown University June 2012. Outline. Beginnings: Employment and Training in the War on Poverty CETA: The High-Water Mark
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Going, Going...Gone? Workforce Development Programs for the Poor Since the War on Poverty Harry J. Holzer Georgetown University June 2012
Outline • Beginnings: Employment and Training in the War on Poverty • CETA: The High-Water Mark • JTPA and WIA: Devolving Programs, Shrinking Funding, Changing Labor Market • Beyond WIA: Important New Developments • Evaluation Evidence: What Works? • Conclusion
Beginnings: E and T in the War on Poverty • Before War on Poverty: MDTA, Response to Fears of Automation and Structural Unemployment • New Focus: Poor/Minorities • What was Done: 1) Job Corps; 2) Others: NYC, WIN, JOBS….$2B by end of LBJ years • Based on Little Evidence or Understanding • Opposition to Broader Program, but acknowledgement of diverse needs – Jobs as well as Skills
CETA: The High-Water Mark • Training: Classroom, OJT, subsidized work –Directly Funded by federal government • PSE Funding: First Countercyclical, then Structural (aimed at Disadvantaged) – Up to 2M by late 1970s • Other direct job creation: TJTC • Focus on Youth (YEDPA, YIEPP) and minorities • Funding: $18B (current $)
JTPA and WIA Years • JTPA: 1982; WIA: 1998; Not Reauthorized • Declining Funds (to $5B) • Devolution and Reorientation • Growing Doubts, Changing Economy
Doubts and Changing Economy • Doubts about Cost-Effectiveness of Training and DJC • Changing Economy: Growing Returns to Education and Achievement, and awareness of gaps – Training seen as weak substitute • Also: Support for Work Incentives, Worker Institutions – Little support from Left or Right
Devolution and Reorientation of JTPA and WIA • Elimination of PSE • Less Long-Term Training, More Services • More Universal – Less Disadvantaged • Employers – Dual Customer Focus • More Decentralized Structure – Local PICs and WIBs • Worker Choice (ITAs) • Dislocated as well as Disadvantaged
Beyond WIA • Shift from D of L to D of ED • Pell Grants! Now $35B – Much for Independent Students doing Vocational Education - But Few Services/Guidance and Low Completion Rates • Also: CTE, School to Work… • Remediation: I-BEST • TAACCCT and Other Grant Programs
Beyond WIA (Cont’d) • Sectoral Training: States and NFWS – Benefits to the Disadvantaged? • Incumbent Worker Training: States • Hard to Employ: Disconnected Mothers,Ex-Offenders and NCPs • ARRA: One-Time Increase
Evaluation Evidence • Huge Literature! • Experimental and Non-Experimental Approaches • JTPA, WIA v. Other Efforts • Very Different Populations, Programs • Training v. Direct Job Creation
JTPA and WIA • JTPA: National JTPA Study – Modest Effects for Adults (Women v. Men), Nothing for Youth, Fadeout • WIA: Nonexperimental (Heinrich et al., Andersson et al.) – Modest Effects for Adults, Little Fadeout so far
Sectoral Programs • PPV Study – Large Impacts, 2 Years Later • Year Up – Similar for Youth • Remaining Questions… • Caution: CET in San Jose v. Replication
Other Populations and Approaches • Welfare Recipients: NEWWS, etc. • Youth: Job Corps (Youth Build, YSCC); ChalleNGe, Youth Opportunities for out of school; Career Academies for in-school • Hard to Employ: Transitional Jobs • Community Colleges: Opening Doors (I-BEST)
Direct Job Creation • Expense, Substitution, Post-Program Impacts? • Results: Net Job Creation if carefully targeted; Post-Program Impacts only if intensive (NSW, TJ) • Tax Credits: TJTC, WOTC – Limited impact, little post-program (Hamersma) • Youth: YIEPP
Conclusion • Small Effects from Small Programs • One Size Doesn’t Fit All! • Sectoral Programs • Hard to Employ: TJs, finanicial incentives and supports • Youth: Paid Work Experience, Hi-quality CTE as pathway to Labor Market and/or Postsecondary Ed. • Not Just Higher Ed – Integration of Higher Ed and Workforce and Closer Alignment with Labor Demand
We’ve Learned Much Since War on Poverty… • Original Insights • Much Learned from Program Evolution and Experimentation/Evaluation • Deserves More Funding and Support, but with Realistic Expectations