Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle

Vocationally educated individuals often find employment sooner after school than those with a general educational qualification. A recent study has argued that the higher employment probability associated with a vocational qualification reverses in later life. The main explanation is that although h...

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Main Authors: Andrea G. Forster, Thijs Bol, Herman G. van de Werfhorst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2016-06-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-21-473/
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spelling doaj-6d06795d2af24a76acb288ea5edfd68f2020-11-24T23:50:56ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962330-66962016-06-0132147349410.15195/3.a213654Vocational Education and Employment over the Life CycleAndrea G. Forster0Thijs Bol1Herman G. van de Werfhorst2 University of Amsterdam University of Amsterdam University of Amsterdam Vocationally educated individuals often find employment sooner after school than those with a general educational qualification. A recent study has argued that the higher employment probability associated with a vocational qualification reverses in later life. The main explanation is that although having (occupation-)specific skills is an advantage when entering the labor market, specific skills also make the vocationally educated less flexible. This life cycle effect is hypothesized to be especially strong in countries where the vocational system provides highly occupation-specific skills. We test these two hypotheses on cross-national data from PIAAC 2012. Using logistic regressions with country fixed effects, we find that individuals with a vocational qualification have a higher employment probability than those with a general qualification at the start of their career, but this pattern reverses in later life. In contrast to earlier findings, we do not find that this effect varies systematically across countries with different vocational educational systems.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-21-473/Educational SystemLabour MarketLife CyclePIAACVocational Education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea G. Forster
Thijs Bol
Herman G. van de Werfhorst
spellingShingle Andrea G. Forster
Thijs Bol
Herman G. van de Werfhorst
Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
Sociological Science
Educational System
Labour Market
Life Cycle
PIAAC
Vocational Education
author_facet Andrea G. Forster
Thijs Bol
Herman G. van de Werfhorst
author_sort Andrea G. Forster
title Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
title_short Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
title_full Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
title_fullStr Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
title_full_unstemmed Vocational Education and Employment over the Life Cycle
title_sort vocational education and employment over the life cycle
publisher Society for Sociological Science
series Sociological Science
issn 2330-6696
2330-6696
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Vocationally educated individuals often find employment sooner after school than those with a general educational qualification. A recent study has argued that the higher employment probability associated with a vocational qualification reverses in later life. The main explanation is that although having (occupation-)specific skills is an advantage when entering the labor market, specific skills also make the vocationally educated less flexible. This life cycle effect is hypothesized to be especially strong in countries where the vocational system provides highly occupation-specific skills. We test these two hypotheses on cross-national data from PIAAC 2012. Using logistic regressions with country fixed effects, we find that individuals with a vocational qualification have a higher employment probability than those with a general qualification at the start of their career, but this pattern reverses in later life. In contrast to earlier findings, we do not find that this effect varies systematically across countries with different vocational educational systems.
topic Educational System
Labour Market
Life Cycle
PIAAC
Vocational Education
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-21-473/
work_keys_str_mv AT andreagforster vocationaleducationandemploymentoverthelifecycle
AT thijsbol vocationaleducationandemploymentoverthelifecycle
AT hermangvandewerfhorst vocationaleducationandemploymentoverthelifecycle
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