A proportion of employees are overqualified for their work. This generates a wage premium relative to the job but a penalty relative to the qualification, and is therefore. A puzzle for human capital theory. A part of this derives from the use of measures of time spent in education for the calculation of overqualification. Analysing data from four European countries, we split years of education into two components, one reflecting certification, another reflecting time. While a qualification higher than required mostly generates a wage premium, time does not. The result is that the combination of time with excess (or deficit) qualification may make overqualification either a major or a minor mismatch. The probability of either outcome varies...
Using a new data set, this paper gives evidence in support of the intuitive notion that overqualifie...
In this paper, we empirically explore how the often reported relationship between overeducation and ...
This paper studies the relationship between mismatch between workers’ skills and labour market requi...
A proportion of employees are overqualified for their work. This generates a wage premium relative t...
A large empirical literature suggests that a proportion of employees are over-educated (overqualifie...
This paper uses a sample of private sector male workers from the European Community Household Panel ...
Educational mismatch as a labour market disruption has lately attracted the interest of many economi...
We report increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education in Britain, and relate this dev...
We build on the configurational approach to identify patterns of macro contextual factors leading to...
2001, we find that the incidence and the consequences, monetary and non-monetary, are different for ...
This paper analyses the wage effect of educational and skills mismatches using cross-sectional data ...
The imbalance in the labor market between the supply of and demand for skills is a widespread phenom...
Research undertaken during the last few years illustrates a major mismatch between educational syste...
This essay delivers two main innovations with respect to the existing literature. First, and foremos...
This essay delivers two main innovations with respect to the existing literature. First, and foremos...
Using a new data set, this paper gives evidence in support of the intuitive notion that overqualifie...
In this paper, we empirically explore how the often reported relationship between overeducation and ...
This paper studies the relationship between mismatch between workers’ skills and labour market requi...
A proportion of employees are overqualified for their work. This generates a wage premium relative t...
A large empirical literature suggests that a proportion of employees are over-educated (overqualifie...
This paper uses a sample of private sector male workers from the European Community Household Panel ...
Educational mismatch as a labour market disruption has lately attracted the interest of many economi...
We report increasing dispersion in the returns to graduate education in Britain, and relate this dev...
We build on the configurational approach to identify patterns of macro contextual factors leading to...
2001, we find that the incidence and the consequences, monetary and non-monetary, are different for ...
This paper analyses the wage effect of educational and skills mismatches using cross-sectional data ...
The imbalance in the labor market between the supply of and demand for skills is a widespread phenom...
Research undertaken during the last few years illustrates a major mismatch between educational syste...
This essay delivers two main innovations with respect to the existing literature. First, and foremos...
This essay delivers two main innovations with respect to the existing literature. First, and foremos...
Using a new data set, this paper gives evidence in support of the intuitive notion that overqualifie...
In this paper, we empirically explore how the often reported relationship between overeducation and ...
This paper studies the relationship between mismatch between workers’ skills and labour market requi...