Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes

Magister Economicae - MEcon === The South African economy faces a challenging socio-economic problem of high and persistent unemployment since the transition. Looking at the unemployment problem in greater perspective, numerous studies found that it is most serious amongst the youth. Since the begi...

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Main Author: Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy
Other Authors: Stoltz, Elizabeth
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4497
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-44972017-08-02T04:00:54Z Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy Stoltz, Elizabeth Yu, Derek Graduate unemployment Labour market trends South Africa Magister Economicae - MEcon The South African economy faces a challenging socio-economic problem of high and persistent unemployment since the transition. Looking at the unemployment problem in greater perspective, numerous studies found that it is most serious amongst the youth. Since the beginning of the 2000s, a few studies focused particularly on youth and graduate unemployment, but there has been a lack of research in this area in recent years. Hence, this dissertation aims to fill some gap in the available research by investigating the extent, nature and causes of graduate unemployment in South Africa. This study firstly defined the relevant concepts and discussed some theories relevant to graduate unemployment, before reviewing the results of the past studies on the nature and extent of graduate unemployment. Thereafter, the possible causes were investigated, such as lack of experience, lack of soft skills, skills mismatch, poor quality of education of the graduates, discrimination by employers, etc. Graduate unemployment in India, China and Europe were also considered, and it was found that graduate unemployment was not in a unique problem in South Africa. The study proceeded with an analysis the Statistics South Africa 1995-2010 labour survey data and conducted more up-to-date statistical analyses of the profile of graduate unemployed. The results showed that the characteristics of unemployed graduates were, in general, the same as what was found by the previous studies, as graduate unemployed were more likely to be female and black, aged 15-34 years at the time of the survey, residing in Gauteng, with only post-Matric certificates or diplomas, and graduating from the fields of Business /Commerce / Management, and Education / Training / Development. The Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition was also applied, and the results indicated that employment discrimination against black graduates was very likely, after controlling for differences in demographic and educational attainment blacks and whites. Hence, the results of the empirical analysis showed that graduate unemployment persists. Finally, graduate employment elasticity coefficients and employment absorption rates were derived by educational attainment category, and the results showed that although graduate unemployment is clearly less serious than unemployment in other educational categories, the labour demand for graduates is not rapid enough to absorb all the graduates. 2015-09-07T20:36:16Z 2015-09-07T20:36:16Z 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4497 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Graduate unemployment
Labour market trends
South Africa
spellingShingle Graduate unemployment
Labour market trends
South Africa
Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy
Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
description Magister Economicae - MEcon === The South African economy faces a challenging socio-economic problem of high and persistent unemployment since the transition. Looking at the unemployment problem in greater perspective, numerous studies found that it is most serious amongst the youth. Since the beginning of the 2000s, a few studies focused particularly on youth and graduate unemployment, but there has been a lack of research in this area in recent years. Hence, this dissertation aims to fill some gap in the available research by investigating the extent, nature and causes of graduate unemployment in South Africa. This study firstly defined the relevant concepts and discussed some theories relevant to graduate unemployment, before reviewing the results of the past studies on the nature and extent of graduate unemployment. Thereafter, the possible causes were investigated, such as lack of experience, lack of soft skills, skills mismatch, poor quality of education of the graduates, discrimination by employers, etc. Graduate unemployment in India, China and Europe were also considered, and it was found that graduate unemployment was not in a unique problem in South Africa. The study proceeded with an analysis the Statistics South Africa 1995-2010 labour survey data and conducted more up-to-date statistical analyses of the profile of graduate unemployed. The results showed that the characteristics of unemployed graduates were, in general, the same as what was found by the previous studies, as graduate unemployed were more likely to be female and black, aged 15-34 years at the time of the survey, residing in Gauteng, with only post-Matric certificates or diplomas, and graduating from the fields of Business /Commerce / Management, and Education / Training / Development. The Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition was also applied, and the results indicated that employment discrimination against black graduates was very likely, after controlling for differences in demographic and educational attainment blacks and whites. Hence, the results of the empirical analysis showed that graduate unemployment persists. Finally, graduate employment elasticity coefficients and employment absorption rates were derived by educational attainment category, and the results showed that although graduate unemployment is clearly less serious than unemployment in other educational categories, the labour demand for graduates is not rapid enough to absorb all the graduates.
author2 Stoltz, Elizabeth
author_facet Stoltz, Elizabeth
Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy
author Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy
author_sort Van de Rheede, Taryn Joy
title Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
title_short Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
title_full Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
title_fullStr Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
title_full_unstemmed Graduate unemployment in South Africa: extent, nature and causes
title_sort graduate unemployment in south africa: extent, nature and causes
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4497
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