Career choice and the strength of weak ties

This paper argues that the structure (i.e., size and composition) of the informal search network is a crucial determinant of the career decisions of young workers. Building on the search-theoretic career choice and job mobility model proposed by Neal (1999), I compare the consequences of career advi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Semih Tümen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-09-01
Series:Central Bank Review
Subjects:
J21
J24
J62
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070117300495
id doaj-ee53459e1440409abda9846cbd8ab814
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ee53459e1440409abda9846cbd8ab8142020-11-24T20:44:47ZengElsevierCentral Bank Review1303-07012017-09-01173919710.1016/j.cbrev.2017.08.002Career choice and the strength of weak tiesSemih Tümen0Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, TurkeyThis paper argues that the structure (i.e., size and composition) of the informal search network is a crucial determinant of the career decisions of young workers. Building on the search-theoretic career choice and job mobility model proposed by Neal (1999), I compare the consequences of career advice by one's weak ties versus that by strong ties. The main result is that receiving help from weak ties is associated with early career and job settlements, while the strong ties are more likely to lead to amplified mobility and generate mismatch. Given a network size, I find a strongly positive correlation between the fraction of weak ties among one's informal connections and the likelihood of settling on a stable career path early in the life course. I also find that the sign of this correlation persists, while the magnitude gets smaller as the network size increases. I conclude that the strength-of-weak-ties hypothesis can shed light on the complexity of job mobility patterns among young workers. The model can explain why it takes much longer for blacks—whose informal networks are documented to consist of strong ties—to locate a stable career path than their white counterparts. It also predicts that young workers from closed and segregated neighborhoods tend to spend more time before they find suitable careers.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070117300495J21J24J62
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Semih Tümen
spellingShingle Semih Tümen
Career choice and the strength of weak ties
Central Bank Review
J21
J24
J62
author_facet Semih Tümen
author_sort Semih Tümen
title Career choice and the strength of weak ties
title_short Career choice and the strength of weak ties
title_full Career choice and the strength of weak ties
title_fullStr Career choice and the strength of weak ties
title_full_unstemmed Career choice and the strength of weak ties
title_sort career choice and the strength of weak ties
publisher Elsevier
series Central Bank Review
issn 1303-0701
publishDate 2017-09-01
description This paper argues that the structure (i.e., size and composition) of the informal search network is a crucial determinant of the career decisions of young workers. Building on the search-theoretic career choice and job mobility model proposed by Neal (1999), I compare the consequences of career advice by one's weak ties versus that by strong ties. The main result is that receiving help from weak ties is associated with early career and job settlements, while the strong ties are more likely to lead to amplified mobility and generate mismatch. Given a network size, I find a strongly positive correlation between the fraction of weak ties among one's informal connections and the likelihood of settling on a stable career path early in the life course. I also find that the sign of this correlation persists, while the magnitude gets smaller as the network size increases. I conclude that the strength-of-weak-ties hypothesis can shed light on the complexity of job mobility patterns among young workers. The model can explain why it takes much longer for blacks—whose informal networks are documented to consist of strong ties—to locate a stable career path than their white counterparts. It also predicts that young workers from closed and segregated neighborhoods tend to spend more time before they find suitable careers.
topic J21
J24
J62
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070117300495
work_keys_str_mv AT semihtumen careerchoiceandthestrengthofweakties
_version_ 1716816707231678464