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Educational mismatch and labor earnings in Brazil
by
Reis, Mauricio Cortez
in
Age
/ Developing countries
/ Earnings
/ Economic models
/ Education
/ Employment
/ Industrialized nations
/ Labor market
/ LDCs
/ Occupations
/ Overqualification
/ Secondary education
/ Variables
/ Workers
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
Educational mismatch and labor earnings in Brazil
by
Reis, Mauricio Cortez
in
Age
/ Developing countries
/ Earnings
/ Economic models
/ Education
/ Employment
/ Industrialized nations
/ Labor market
/ LDCs
/ Occupations
/ Overqualification
/ Secondary education
/ Variables
/ Workers
2017
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Journal Article
Educational mismatch and labor earnings in Brazil
2017
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Overview
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between educational mismatch and labor earnings in Brazil, taking into account individual fixed effects.
Design/methodology/approach
The empirical analysis employs longitudinal data and information provided by job analysts about the schooling required for each occupation. The latter of which is used to classify workers as undereducated, overeducated, or adequately matched. Estimates include individual fixed effects to control for time-invariant unobserved heterogeneity.
Findings
Evidence indicates that one more year of overeducation increases labor earnings, but only half as strong as one more year of required schooling. The estimated effects on years of undereducation are negative, but undereducated workers earn more than adequately matched workers with the same level of education. Although, in particular, the incidence of undereducation in Brazil is much higher than reported for developed countries, the impact of over- and undereducation does not differ.
Research limitations/implications
The fixed effects approach only controls for unobservable factors that are time-invariant. Also, much lower impacts using fixed effects may be due in part to attenuation bias as a consequence of measurement errors.
Originality/value
This study contributes to the scarce literature on the consequences of overeducation and undereducation for labor earnings in developing countries, providing estimates that take into account individual fixed effects.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited,Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Subject
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