After unification large amounts of money were spent to retrain the East
Germany labour force in order to ease the transition to the new market
economy. This book uses microeconometric methods and individual data to
evaluate the impact of these training programmes on the participants'
labour market situation. It discusses the appropriate evaluation
methodology as well as the effectiveness of the actual programmes for
the individual participants. The empirical results suggest that the
public sector sponsored training programmes were fairly ineffective. In
contrast, the training organized and paid by the enterprises caused
considerable earnings growings.