Choosing to Be Trained: Evidence from a Field Experiment
40 Pages Posted: 3 Nov 2012
Date Written: July 2012
Abstract
This paper combines unique experimental and survey data to examine the determinants of self-selection into a training program. Women residing in selected disadvantaged areas in New Delhi, India were invited to apply for a six-month long subsidized training program in stitching and tailoring. A random subset of applicants and non-applicants to the training program were invited to participate in an artefactual field experiment and in a detailed socio-economic survey. We find that applicants and non-applicants differ both in terms of socio-economic characteristics (elicited through survey data), and behavioral traits (elicited using a field experiment). Identifying these characteristics can help policy-makers design and promote programs so as to make them more appealing to the target group, and thus improve take-up rates. Our results also suggest that as a methodology, there is valuable information to be gained by dissecting the black box of unobservables using behavioral data from experiments.
Keywords: Selection, Field Experiment, Household Survey, Risk, Competition
JEL Classification: J24, C93, C81
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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