Subsidized Employment and Transitional Jobs

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Organization: 
Big Ideas for Jobs
Author: 
Chris Warland and Melissa Young

Chris Warland and Melissa Young with the National Transitional Jobs Network at Heartland Alliance and Elizabeth Lower-Basch with the Center for Law and Social Policy look into innovative funding strategies for cities, states, and other public-sector entities to implement or expand subsidized employment programming.

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Big Ideas for Jobs

This report is part of the Big Ideas for Jobs project. The ideas were proposed by experts in the job creation field who were tasked with developing new ideas about programs and policies that can help to create jobs. As a starting point, the following criteria were established for the ideas:

  1. The proposed programs should be designed for implementation by cities and/or states with or without federal support, should lead to net new job creation in a short-term framework, and should be accessible for low-skilled workers and offer some career opportunity;
  2. They should be practical, with implementation not requiring major political or institutional changes;
  3. Ideas should be sustainable, not requiring significant new investment and feasible at a relatively low cost per job;
  4. They should be scalable, at least at the state level; and
  5. They should be already tested.

The ideas have been divided into the categories of Tax and Employment Policy, Sectoral or Industry Ideas, Entrepreneurship. 

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Year: 
2013
Format: 
Research report
Categories: 
Job Training
Entrepreneurship & Business Development
Policy Development & Advocacy

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