Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data

Disadvantaged unemployed Danes do not easily become re-employed. Previous literature has focused on unemployment versus employment. Expanding on this, the present article is a proposal to assess disadvantaged unemployed people’s employability. On the basis of the literature, I investigate whether va...

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Main Author: Sofie Dencker-Larsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Aalborg University 2017-09-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/97089
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spelling doaj-bd24df3acb454a45a51cb60f0d15aa542020-11-25T00:49:16ZengAalborg UniversityNordic Journal of Working Life Studies2245-01572017-09-017310.18291/njwls.v7i3.97089Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register DataSofie Dencker-Larsen0National Research Centre for the Working Environment (NRCWE)Disadvantaged unemployed Danes do not easily become re-employed. Previous literature has focused on unemployment versus employment. Expanding on this, the present article is a proposal to assess disadvantaged unemployed people’s employability. On the basis of the literature, I investigate whether variables measuring health, well-being, self-efficacy, alcohol use, and drug use can be included into this measure of employability measured as subsequent re-employment. Data are on disadvantaged unemployment cash benefit recipients from the Copenhagen Unemployment and Well-Being Panel Survey (2013, 2014, N = 2400, analytical sample N = 956) and detailed register data on employment status measured weekly. The results from the analysis reveal that only parts of the proposed indicator are linked with subsequent re-employment, and comprehensive robustness checks reveal that the indicator lacks stability. However, the findings from the study can inform future studies aiming at developing an indicator of employability for disadvantaged unemployed people in Denmark and the other Nordic countries.https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/97089HealthWorking Environment and WellbeingEmploymentwagesunemployment & rehabilitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofie Dencker-Larsen
spellingShingle Sofie Dencker-Larsen
Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
Health
Working Environment and Wellbeing
Employment
wages
unemployment & rehabilitation
author_facet Sofie Dencker-Larsen
author_sort Sofie Dencker-Larsen
title Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
title_short Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
title_full Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
title_fullStr Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Employability for Disadvantaged Unemployed People? Evidence from Survey and Register Data
title_sort measuring employability for disadvantaged unemployed people? evidence from survey and register data
publisher Aalborg University
series Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
issn 2245-0157
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Disadvantaged unemployed Danes do not easily become re-employed. Previous literature has focused on unemployment versus employment. Expanding on this, the present article is a proposal to assess disadvantaged unemployed people’s employability. On the basis of the literature, I investigate whether variables measuring health, well-being, self-efficacy, alcohol use, and drug use can be included into this measure of employability measured as subsequent re-employment. Data are on disadvantaged unemployment cash benefit recipients from the Copenhagen Unemployment and Well-Being Panel Survey (2013, 2014, N = 2400, analytical sample N = 956) and detailed register data on employment status measured weekly. The results from the analysis reveal that only parts of the proposed indicator are linked with subsequent re-employment, and comprehensive robustness checks reveal that the indicator lacks stability. However, the findings from the study can inform future studies aiming at developing an indicator of employability for disadvantaged unemployed people in Denmark and the other Nordic countries.
topic Health
Working Environment and Wellbeing
Employment
wages
unemployment & rehabilitation
url https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/97089
work_keys_str_mv AT sofiedenckerlarsen measuringemployabilityfordisadvantagedunemployedpeopleevidencefromsurveyandregisterdata
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