Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia

Abstract In almost all developed countries there has been substantial growth in university education over the last half-century. This growth has raised concerns that the benefits of university education are declining and that university education is not appropriate for students who, without the expa...

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Main Author: Gary N. Marks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-05-01
Series:Journal for Labour Market Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0241-0
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spelling doaj-41ea3ed21f264babbb3e9cf38a52f5bb2020-11-24T21:58:40ZengSpringerOpenJournal for Labour Market Research2510-50192510-50272018-05-0152111410.1186/s12651-018-0241-0Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from AustraliaGary N. Marks0Directorate of Government, Policy and Strategy, Australian Catholic UniversityAbstract In almost all developed countries there has been substantial growth in university education over the last half-century. This growth has raised concerns that the benefits of university education are declining and that university education is not appropriate for students who, without the expansion, would not have been admitted. For such students, vocational education or direct entry to the labour market may be more appropriate. The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of university and vocational qualifications, net of other influences on a variety of labour market outcomes for Australian youths up to age 25; and if the benefits of university degrees differ across the achievement continuum. Achievement is measured by test scores in the OECD’s PISA assessments. The six labour market outcomes investigated are: occupational status, hourly and weekly earnings, employment, unemployment and full-time work. The study finds that university degrees provide substantially superior labour market outcomes which are not confined to high and average achievers, at least for this cohort in their formative years in the labour market.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0241-0University degreeVocational qualificationsYouthOccupational status, earnings, unemploymentFull-time employment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gary N. Marks
spellingShingle Gary N. Marks
Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
Journal for Labour Market Research
University degree
Vocational qualifications
Youth
Occupational status, earnings, unemployment
Full-time employment
author_facet Gary N. Marks
author_sort Gary N. Marks
title Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
title_short Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
title_full Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
title_fullStr Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
title_full_unstemmed Do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? Evidence from Australia
title_sort do the labour market returns to university degrees differ between high and low achieving youth? evidence from australia
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal for Labour Market Research
issn 2510-5019
2510-5027
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract In almost all developed countries there has been substantial growth in university education over the last half-century. This growth has raised concerns that the benefits of university education are declining and that university education is not appropriate for students who, without the expansion, would not have been admitted. For such students, vocational education or direct entry to the labour market may be more appropriate. The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of university and vocational qualifications, net of other influences on a variety of labour market outcomes for Australian youths up to age 25; and if the benefits of university degrees differ across the achievement continuum. Achievement is measured by test scores in the OECD’s PISA assessments. The six labour market outcomes investigated are: occupational status, hourly and weekly earnings, employment, unemployment and full-time work. The study finds that university degrees provide substantially superior labour market outcomes which are not confined to high and average achievers, at least for this cohort in their formative years in the labour market.
topic University degree
Vocational qualifications
Youth
Occupational status, earnings, unemployment
Full-time employment
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12651-018-0241-0
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