%0 Report %A Fawaz, Yarine %A Hospido, Laura %A Llobet, Júlia Martí %T Bridging Welfare and Work: Assessing Intensive Job Placement for Minimum Income Recipients %D 2025 %8 2025 Oct %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 18169 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp18169 %X We evaluate the effects of a randomized activation program targeting recipients of the Spain’s national Minimum Income Scheme. The intervention combined personalized coaching, job-search assistance, soft-skills training, and, in one treatment arm, also digital-skills workshops. While short-run employment effects were limited, the program significantly reduced the prevalence of informal work and improved participants’ financial resilience. Gains were particularly pronounced among those who received the digital-skills component, who reported large improvements in digital task performance. Half a year after receiving the treatment, administrative social security records show emerging positive effects on days worked, contract stability, and full-time employment, especially in the digital-skills group. We also find evidence of a psychological awareness effect: low-engagement participants reported lower self-assessed transversal skills, possibly reflecting a shift in self-perception. Our findings highlight the potential of multidimensional, personalized activation strategies to foster formalization and digital inclusion among low-income populations. %K randomized controlled trial %K active labor market policies %K social inclusion