Micro Econometric Analysis Of Determinants Of Occupational Choice In Algeria
Nacer-Eddine Hammouda and
Moundir Lassassi ()
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Moundir Lassassi: Centre de recherche en économie appliquée pour le développement-CREAD
No 5, Working Papers from AlmaLaurea Inter-University Consortium
Abstract:
A review of the literature on the issue of labor market participation and occupational choice, allows us to see that research on this one turned more on developed countries. In underdeveloped countries, including Algeria, the determinants of participation in economic activity and individuals’ occupational choice remain understood despite their economic and social importance since the degree of economic vulnerability and social development is strongly correlated with the occupied job. This work is not concerned with income from the labor market but rather the process that takes place upstream, that is to say, the integration into the labor market. We will study the labor market functioning by analyzing the supply and demand of labor. So the first step is to analyze the participation determinants in economic activity and in a second stage to determine the role of individual characteristics, in particular human capital for the tenure choice. The aim of this work is to answer to the following questions: • What are the factors that influence individual's participation in the labor market? Is there a difference between men and women? • What are the occupational choice determinants of an individual on the labor market? Is this the same factors for men and women? • What are the causes of failure in the labor market? To answer to all our concerns, we have exploited the employment surveys conducted by the National Office of Statistics (NOS) from Algerian households (employment surveys 1997 and 2007). For processing and data analysis, we applied several econometric techniques: models of discrete choice (binary logistic regression) and segmentation techniques. Four major findings emerged from this study: first, we note that women's participation in economic activity is following logic quite different from that of men. For women, the education and training that determine the participation in the labor market. For men, it is rather the age that determines participation. The second result concerns the effect of the sex variable; the latter has very important effect in the first phase of participation in economic activity. In the second phase (being busy) the effect of this variable is less important. The third result indicates the human capital importance in the positioning in the various segments of the labor market and improving the job situation. The fourth result is dysfunction in the labor market due to the mismatch between characterized supply by a population increasingly educated and labor demand characterized by job creation increasingly unqualified.
Keywords: Human capital; labor market; occupational choice; recruitment channels; discrete choice model (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C25 J21 J23 J24 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 22
Date: 2011-09
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