Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008
Abstract Human capital theory and the life-course perspective are used to investigate how economic modernisation, as well as developments in the labour market after the West German “economic miracle”, impacted employers’ supply of further education and training on the job, and employees’ increased p...
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Online Access: | http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40461-019-0079-x |
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doaj-9e586dd2116e4452b6f330718e3acfac2020-11-25T00:34:35ZengSpringerOpenEmpirical Research in Vocational Education and Training1877-63452019-02-0111112910.1186/s40461-019-0079-xEconomic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008Rolf Becker0Department of Sociology of Education, University of BernAbstract Human capital theory and the life-course perspective are used to investigate how economic modernisation, as well as developments in the labour market after the West German “economic miracle”, impacted employers’ supply of further education and training on the job, and employees’ increased participation in these arrangements. Additionally—controlling for the aforementioned structural change and economic cycles—it is analysed whether participation in further training minimises employees’ risk of dismissal and heightens their commitment to a company. The hypotheses are tested using longitudinal data and time series—allowing the analysis of employees’ participation in further education and training on the job, and the careers of West Germans born between 1956 and 1978 for the 1972–2008 periods—by procedures of event history analysis and episode splitting in a dynamic multi-level design. Systematic period and cohort effects of structural change in the economy and labour markets on companies’ supply of, and employees’ participation in, continued vocational training on the job have been revealed. Participation in further training reduces employees’ risk of dismissal, as well as their mobility between companies. Participants’ adaptation to structural change via job-related further training is correlated with increased employment security, professional flexibility, and commitment to the employer.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40461-019-0079-xFurther trainingOccupational careerHuman capital theoryLife-course researchEvent history analysisTime series |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rolf Becker |
spellingShingle |
Rolf Becker Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training Further training Occupational career Human capital theory Life-course research Event history analysis Time series |
author_facet |
Rolf Becker |
author_sort |
Rolf Becker |
title |
Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 |
title_short |
Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 |
title_full |
Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 |
title_fullStr |
Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in Germany, 1970–2008 |
title_sort |
economic change and continuous vocational training in the work history: a longitudinal multilevel analysis of the employees’ participation in further training and the effects on their occupational careers in germany, 1970–2008 |
publisher |
SpringerOpen |
series |
Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training |
issn |
1877-6345 |
publishDate |
2019-02-01 |
description |
Abstract Human capital theory and the life-course perspective are used to investigate how economic modernisation, as well as developments in the labour market after the West German “economic miracle”, impacted employers’ supply of further education and training on the job, and employees’ increased participation in these arrangements. Additionally—controlling for the aforementioned structural change and economic cycles—it is analysed whether participation in further training minimises employees’ risk of dismissal and heightens their commitment to a company. The hypotheses are tested using longitudinal data and time series—allowing the analysis of employees’ participation in further education and training on the job, and the careers of West Germans born between 1956 and 1978 for the 1972–2008 periods—by procedures of event history analysis and episode splitting in a dynamic multi-level design. Systematic period and cohort effects of structural change in the economy and labour markets on companies’ supply of, and employees’ participation in, continued vocational training on the job have been revealed. Participation in further training reduces employees’ risk of dismissal, as well as their mobility between companies. Participants’ adaptation to structural change via job-related further training is correlated with increased employment security, professional flexibility, and commitment to the employer. |
topic |
Further training Occupational career Human capital theory Life-course research Event history analysis Time series |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40461-019-0079-x |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT rolfbecker economicchangeandcontinuousvocationaltrainingintheworkhistoryalongitudinalmultilevelanalysisoftheemployeesparticipationinfurthertrainingandtheeffectsontheiroccupationalcareersingermany19702008 |
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