Reemployment premium effect of furlough programs: evaluating Spain’s scheme during the COVID‑19 crisis
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Abstract
This paper presents an average treatment effect analysis of Spain’s furlough program during the onset of the COVID-
19 pandemic. Using 2020 labour force quarterly microdata, we construct a counterfactual made of comparable
nonfurloughed individuals who lost their jobs and apply propensity score matching based on their pretreatment
characteristics. Our findings show that the probability of being re-employed in the next quarter significantly increased
for the treated (furlough granted group). These results appear robust across models, after testing a wide range of
matching specifications that reveal a reemployment probability premium of near 30 percentage points in the group
of workers who had been furloughed for a single quarter. Nevertheless, a different time arrangement affected the
magnitude of the effect, suggesting that it may decrease with the furlough duration. Thus, an analogous analysis
for a longer (two quarter) scheme estimated a still positive but smaller effect, approximately 12 percentage points.
Although this finding might alert against long lasting schemes under persistent recessions, this policy still stands as a
useful strategy to face essentially transitory adverse shocks.
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Bibliographic citation
Garcia-Clemente, J., Rubino, N., & Congregado, E. (2023). Reemployment premium effect of furlough programs: evaluating Spain’s scheme during the COVID-19 crisis. In Journal for Labour Market Research (Vol. 57, Issue 1). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12651-023-00343-w














