This study analyses the persistence and true state dependence of overqualification, i.e. a mismatch between workers' qualifications and their jobs educational requirements. Employing individual-level panel data for Germany, I find that overqualification is highly persistent among tertiary graduates over the first ten years of their career cycle. Accounting for unobserved heterogeneity, results from dynamic random-effects probit models suggest that only a small share of the observed persistence can be attributed to a true state dependence effect. Unobserved factors are found to be the main driver of the high persistence of overqualification. In particular, selection into initial overqualification at the start of the career is of high importa...
During the early Nineties the proportion of a cohort entering higher education in the UK doubled ove...
Based on monthly observations of their labour market status in the first seven years after leaving e...
'The theory of career mobility (Sicherman and Galor 1990) claims that wage penalties for overeducate...
This paper tests whether overeducation at the beginning of a graduate ’s job career is a trap into c...
A large empirical literature suggests that a proportion of employees are over-educated (overqualifie...
We report increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education in Britain, and relate this dev...
This paper investigates the phenomenon of qualification mismatch (overeducation) among graduates fro...
Increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education is found, using quantile regression. Thi...
Studies on the underlying mechanisms of social mobility commonly find that half of the intergenerat...
During the early 1990s the proportion of a cohort entering higher education in the UK doubled over a...
Overqualification occurs when a person has a surplus of knowledge, experience, and qualifications re...
Drawing on a very rich data set from a recent cohort of PhD graduates, we examine the correlates and...
Overeducation—the situation in which one has more schooling than is needed to do one’s job—has been ...
The theory of career mobility (Sicherman and Galor 1990) claims that wage penalties for overeducated...
During the early Nineties the proportion of a cohort entering higher education in the UK doubled ove...
Based on monthly observations of their labour market status in the first seven years after leaving e...
'The theory of career mobility (Sicherman and Galor 1990) claims that wage penalties for overeducate...
This paper tests whether overeducation at the beginning of a graduate ’s job career is a trap into c...
A large empirical literature suggests that a proportion of employees are over-educated (overqualifie...
We report increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education in Britain, and relate this dev...
This paper investigates the phenomenon of qualification mismatch (overeducation) among graduates fro...
Increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education is found, using quantile regression. Thi...
Studies on the underlying mechanisms of social mobility commonly find that half of the intergenerat...
During the early 1990s the proportion of a cohort entering higher education in the UK doubled over a...
Overqualification occurs when a person has a surplus of knowledge, experience, and qualifications re...
Drawing on a very rich data set from a recent cohort of PhD graduates, we examine the correlates and...
Overeducation—the situation in which one has more schooling than is needed to do one’s job—has been ...
The theory of career mobility (Sicherman and Galor 1990) claims that wage penalties for overeducated...
During the early Nineties the proportion of a cohort entering higher education in the UK doubled ove...
Based on monthly observations of their labour market status in the first seven years after leaving e...
'The theory of career mobility (Sicherman and Galor 1990) claims that wage penalties for overeducate...