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How Well Can We Measure Graduate Over- Education and Its Effects?

H. Battu, C.R. Belfield and Peter Sloane
Additional contact information
H. Battu: Department of Economics, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, AB24 3QY
C.R. Belfield: School of Education, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B I5 2TT

National Institute Economic Review, 2000, vol. 171, issue 1, 82-93

Abstract: Using data from two cohorts of graduates, this article examines three aspects of over-education. First, using three new measures, we present an estimate of graduate over-education in the UK. We find that the scale of over-education varies with measurement techniques, with weak correlations between the three measures. Second, across the three measures we estimate the effects of over-education on earnings and job satisfaction. The effects of over-education on earnings and job satisfaction are similar, not withstanding the measures identifying different individuals as being over-educated. One finding is that the effects of being over-educated are more significant for female graduates than male, although it is ambigu ous which gender is more prone to over-education. Third, we examine another source of ambiguity regarding over education, namely that firms upgrade the tasks they allocate to their employees who appear to be over-educated. We find that, for graduates, job quality for the over-educated is not converging to that of the appropriately educated.

Date: 2000
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