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The impact of overeducation on wages of recent economic sciences graduates

Mariana De Santis, María Cecilia Gáname and Pedro Moncarz
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Mariana De Santis: Universidad Nacional de Córdoba/CICE-CIECS
María Cecilia Gáname: Universidad Nacional de Córdoba/CICE-CIECS

No 34, Working Papers from Red Nacional de Investigadores en Economía (RedNIE)

Abstract: According to human capital theory, wages are determined by workers' productivity, which in its crudest form implies that return to education does not depend on how workers' skills are used in the labour market (Sloane, 2003). However, after controlling for other differences, the empirical evidence has shown that workers with the same education can be paid differently. The literature has found that young people are more likely to experience a mismatch between their formal education and that required for their jobs. While there is no consensus on the reasons for the mismatch, there is a consensus on the consequences in terms of wages; overeducation means a penalty in terms of income. Our evidence shows that overeducated graduates of the Facultad de Ciencias Económicas of the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (FCE-UNC) suffer a wage penalty compared to those working in a job that requires a university degree. The results are robust to different specifications and the use of alternative estimators. While the difference is not statistically significant, the penalty for people with a severe level of overeducation is higher than for those with a mild level of overeducation; having had work experience while studying at university helps to reduce the cost of overeducation; women exhibit a similar penalty to men. While on average overeducation means a wage penalty, there is great heterogeneity among overeducated graduates, with those at the top end of the wage distribution experiencing a much lower penalty, or even a prernium in sorne cases. Finally, while in the case of overeducation we find statistically significant effects, the same is not true of the horizontal mismatch in terms of knowledge.

Keywords: overeducation; wages; conomic; sciences; graduates (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I21 J31 J44 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 37 pages
Date: 2021-02
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