PublicadoEl 23/11/22 por Comillas
Artículo

Overqualification, skill mismatches and wages in private sector employment in Europe

tipo de documento semantico ckh_publication

Ficheros

TEDE-2012-0170R2_11j2013.docx
Tamaño 163930
Formato Unknown
Fecha de publicación 01/06/2014
Autor
Budría Rodríguez, Santiago
Moro Egido, Ana
Fuente Revista: Technological and Economic Development of Economy, Periodo: 4, Volumen: 20, Número: 3, Página inicial: 457, Página final: 483
Estado info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Resumen

Idioma es-ES
Resumen

This paper uses a sample of private sector male workers from the European Community Household Panel to examine the wage effects of educational mismatches across segments of the earnings distribution in 12 countries. We consider two types of mismatch, overqualification and skills mismatches. By differentiating between quantiles, we discriminate between groups of workers with different unobservable earnings conditions. We find that the detrimental effects of skill mismatches on wages are larger than those of overqualification in most segments of the earnings distribution. Moreover, we find that the pay penalty of educational mismatch tends to be higher among workers with higher unconditional wages. This finding suggests that the mismatch phenomenon entails wage losses over and above those attributable to unobservable earnings determinants, including ability and skills possessed by workers.

Idioma en-GB
Resumen

This paper uses a sample of private sector male workers from the European Community Household Panel to examine the wage effects of educational mismatches across segments of the earnings distribution in 12 countries. We consider two types of mismatch, overqualification and skills mismatches. By differentiating between quantiles, we discriminate between groups of workers with different unobservable earnings conditions. We find that the detrimental effects of skill mismatches on wages are larger than those of overqualification in most segments of the earnings distribution. Moreover, we find that the pay penalty of educational mismatch tends to be higher among workers with higher unconditional wages. This finding suggests that the mismatch phenomenon entails wage losses over and above those attributable to unobservable earnings determinants, including ability and skills possessed by workers.

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Tipo de archivo application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
Idioma es-ES
Tipo de acceso info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Fecha de modificacion 28/03/2017
Fecha de disponibilidad 28/03/2017
fecha de alta 28/03/2017

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