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Book Cover
Book
Author Gray, Matthew.

Title Indigenous job search success / M.C. Gray and B.H. Hunter
Published Canberra : Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, 2005

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  305.89915 Gra/Ijs  AVAILABLE
Description viii, 26 pages ; 25 cm
Series Discussion paper, 1036-1774 ; no. 274/2005
LSE health and social care discussion paper. 1036-1774 ; no. 274/2005
Summary One important and under-researched aspect of labour market policy is the extent to which policy interventions are effective in modifying job search behaviour. Furthermore, there is little extant research on whether certain job search behaviours lead to labour market success. Our analysis uses the only existing largescale longitudinal survey of Indigenous Australians to examine the effects of job search behaviour over an 18-month period from March 1996. One major finding is that the introduction of the Job Search Diary during the survey period was effective in increasing search intensity but this increase in intensity did not result in increased employment rates. Another fi nding is that the job search methods used were not generally related to the probability of finding and retaining employment when a range of other personal and regional factors are taken into account. Those with a greater level of search intensity (as measured by the number of jobs applied for) at the fi rst wave of the survey did have a signifi cantly higher probability of finding employment than those searching less intensely. However, search intensity is unrelated to the probability of job retention. Other factors, such as educational attainment, health status, region of residence and having been arrested, account for the majority of labour market success (or lack of it) among unemployed Indigenous job seeker
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
ISBN 0731556496