Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
354544 | Economics of Education Review | 2013 | 14 Pages |
This paper examines long-term changes in the persistence of overeducation among individual workers, focusing on the relationship between the rate of those changes and the general economic situation. All analyses are based on data from the Polish Panel Survey (POLPAN) conducted throughout the post-communist transition period, 1988–2008. The results suggest that being in a job with too low educational requirements is stable through time and raises the probability of experiencing the same situation five years later. The incidence of overeducation increased in the studied period, most rapidly during recession. The youngest cohorts, workers aged 26–35 in 2008, faced a higher risk of persistent overqualification than other cohorts. These findings are consistent with Thurow's job competition theory, as well as Sattinger's job assignment model.
► Changes in the persistence of overeducation among individual workers. ► Being in a job with too low educational requirements is stable through time. ► The youngest cohorts faced a higher risk of persistent overqualification. ► The results are consistent with Thurow's job competition theory and Sattinger's job assignment theory.