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Over-education. Amanda Gosling and Yu Zhu GES Summer School, Kent , 30th June 2010. Structure. Introduction and Motivation Background (literature, some trends and data A bit of theory Estimating the extent of over-education and discussion of some evidence Tea Break Discussion.
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Over-education Amanda Gosling and Yu Zhu GES Summer School, Kent, 30th June 2010
Structure • Introduction and Motivation • Background (literature, some trends and data • A bit of theory • Estimating the extent of over-education and discussion of some evidence • Tea Break • Discussion
Why look at over-education? • Over-education is a very active research field: • Google Scholar keyword search returns 2000+ papers in Business, Administration, Finance, and Economics; and another 12000+ papers in Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities • Policy • Controversy over 50% target of cohort in further or higher education • Debate over the level and mechanisms for funding and subsidy • Current (25% help!) funding cuts • Skills and Concepts • Controversy over over-education is a good way to understand what labour economics are concerned about, the models and concepts used and the key areas of disagreement • Right way to model the labour market • How to estimate the return to education? • How to think about policy interventions
Workshop should not be considered a summary of everything there is to know about over-education but an illustration of current thinking about labour markets through this particular question
Definitions • Micro • Over-education refers to the situation when a job-holder has an achieved qualification above that which would currently be required for someone to get the job (rather than to do the job). • As such, it represents graduate labour market disequilibrium: workers possess excess educational qualifications relative to those their jobs require. • Macro • Labour market has “too many” graduates • Credentialism • Again represent disequilibrium • Examples • Slacker • Philosophy PhD • SAHM • Mother with small children unable to find suitable jobs with flexible/part time hours • Russian Labour market • Early labour market experiences • Long run graduates “trapped” in low status jobs
Background • Emphasis on education expansion • Third way (emphasis on equality of ops. rather than of outcomes) • Becoming more controversial • Academic • Freeman (the over-educated American) • Research on demand and supply of skills • Research on large (and growing) returns to education • Micro led research on over-education (and its criticisms) • Factual • Changes in “return” to education • Participation in education • Long series on education by occupation and gender
Academic background (1) Cobweb-model Graduate wage supply Wage associated with zero rents demand Graduate employment
Card and Lemieux (QJE 2001) • Look at changes over time in relative wage of graduates • Hypothesis that part of the changes can be explain by changes in relative supply • Idea that demand and supply are always racing to keep up with each other • Strong support using US micro data • BUT • Identification problems • Identification relies on non-substitutability of workers of different ages • Estimate is “raw”
What do we know about the return to education? • Early work (e.g. Dennison 1962, 1967) on growth accounting • But is education a consumption or investment good? • Mincer, Becker Human Capital Wage regressions • Rate of return (like on any other asset) • High but fluctuating • Sheepskin effects • Later (Ashenfelter, Angrist, Kruegar, Walker) on solving the “ability bias” problem • Use of instrumental variables to relate differences in wages to differences in education that are not a result of differences in ability (e.g. Twin studies, Vietnam draft, Compulsory School Leaving laws) • Measured returns appear to RISE • Measurement error • Heterogeneity in Returns (marginal entrant different from the average, suggestion of credit constraints)
What do we know about the return to education? • Changes in the return to education over time (Card, Gosling et al. Schmitt). • Sharp rise over 80s and early 90s • Evidence (Green and Zhu) that return to education for younger cohorts has flattened or even fallen • Growing focus on the distribution of returns using techniques like quantile regressions • Starts off with Buschinsky (1996) • Key difficulty is that the distribution of returns is NOT the same as the distribution of differences • Treatment effect literature • Consensus that all changes to the structure of wages cannot be explained by differences in the demand and supply of education and skills
Over–education literature • Consequences (wages, job satisfaction • Causes (race, gender, discrimination, ability) • Measurement • Changes over time • Long versus short run • Implications for human capital model • Is this a meaningful avenue for research?
Now some data on background trends Own calculations using FES and BHPS data
Summary • Dramatic increase in relative supply of educated workers over last 30 years • Some weak evidence that the return has declined • For younger cohorts • Distribution of returns • Picture becomes less clear cut when we look at employment • More graduates doing non-graduate jobs but • Less of these jobs • Numbers are small • Not clear that over-education is a growing problem • Might think it should be more of an issue for women but this is not apparent in the data
Some key economic concepts to understand and think about • Production functions • Education as screening/signalling device • Labour market models • Incentives to acquire education. If education is a choice, how can a worker have too much? • Investment under uncertainty
Production functions • Can we write a production function with labour quality in which the concept of over-education “makes sense”? • Need the marginal product of extra education to be zero • Firm production with labour of different types • Technology of human capital production • Part of explanation of why this topic is so controversial
Education as screening/signalling device • Dog-bone economy (Sattinger) • Variations in costs of education are correlated with variation in unobserved ability. • Sheepskin effects • Plausibility of models depend on other available strategies to separate workers
Labour market • Assume there ARE some firms for which MP of education is zero • Will we then get over-education? • Argue that only in presence of labour market imperfections
W Supply of graduates Supply of non graduates L Q
W Supply of graduates Supply of non graduates L Q Non graduate firm ONLY employs non graduates
So in classic model of labour market will get specialisation rather than over-education • If we do see “over-education” then it must be to do with technology of human capital rather than production • If graduate were in non graduate jobs they would have to get a graduate wage • So specialisation and no wage diffs
What about market with frictions? • Much applied theory of the labour market (Burdett, Shimer, Mortensen, Coles, Manning) works on the idea that workers are not able to see or to move to all potential jobs • Search or mobility costs • Non wage differences in jobs (Bhaskar and To) • See idea with simple discriminating monopsony model (but note this analysis is partial)
Supply non graduates W Supply graduates Constant marginal product for simplicity N
W Marginal cost of hiring non graduate Marginal cost of hiring graduate Supply graduates Supply non graduates demand N
W Marginal cost of hiring non graduate Marginal cost of hiring graduate Supply graduates Supply non graduates demand Small wage premium here and large diff in employment N
W Marginal cost of hiring non graduate Marginal cost of hiring graduate Supply graduates Supply non graduates demand Note that could have drawn graph to get a NEGATIVE or zero premium N
So • Simple monopsony model does predict incidence of over-education • Model is ambivalent about relative wage for graduates in non graduate firms • If labour supply is very inelastic then may get zero or negative differences • Costs too much for the firm to try and get more graduates by paying them more • Key thing is the relative wage depends on outside option NOT on relative productivity • What about industries with more than one firm?
This analysis is partial, as if each firm follows this strategy the supply curves will look very different • General equilibrium search models,(Diamond (1971) , Burdett and Mortensen (1998) can be easily used to show how the relative wage and employment of graduates will evolve in the non graduate sector in equilibrium • Manning shows that key findings are similar to those in the partial equilibrium model BUT • Get wage dispersion amongst workers of each type • Association of education and wages across firms (higher wage firm attract more educated workers) but this does not relate to productivity • May get higher graduate unemployment
What about incentives to acquire human capital? • Assume • There exist firms for which MP of education is zero • Labour market frictions exist • private returns are lower than social returns • returns are risky
Earnings B Stays at school until E A Leaves school at F O G + E F Age 65 - C D
So if individuals are undertaking investments with low return • Are the costs also low • Open to the floor! • Temporary versus permanent effects • Is the low return predictable ex ante? • If so then mean return may be large but the outcome small or zero • Finding from investment literature is that this typically results in under-investment as agents are risk averse • Case for MORE subsidy not less • Govt. should act as insurer (graduate tax?)
Background • Focus on graduate over-education • Better measured than other types of over-education • important policy implications • HE expansion over the past two decades • Government policy to increase HE participation rate to 50% • Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education (DLHE) survey: snapshot of graduates 6 months after graduation • Latest figure on the 2008 cohort of graduates: • 61.4% entering employment, 14.1% entering further study or training, 8.1% entering working & studying, 7.9% unemployed and 8.5% other
What types of work did graduates go into? • Of those who were working ft or pt or combine work with further study, 32.3% (last 5 rows) might be classified as over-educated • But this is only 6 months after graduation
Earnings of new graduates by occupations • salary of full-time, first degree leavers who entered full-time employment in the UK • Graduates in professional jobs earn more than their counterparts in non-graduate occupations • Associate professionals in between
Trend in over-education: DLHE 2004-8 • Graduate job classifications were developed by Professors Peter Elias and Kate Purcell for their study Seven Years On: Graduates in the Changing Labour Market.
Measurement of over-education • Typologies of over-education: • Objective measures of over-education • Required education determined on the basis of job title according to the SOC system (job title inflation will lead to under-estimation of over-education!) • Comparing individual’s education with the mean education level of his/her occupation • Subjective measures of over-education • Self-assessed (by the respondent) minimum requirements of the job (to be contrasted with individual’s acquired education) • Directly asking the respondent whether they are overeducated • Distinction between overqualification and skill underutilization • Respondent’s satisfaction with the match between qualification and job
Empirical evidence • Use the Green & Zhu 2010 OEP paper as a case study • Based on up-to-date data from the UK Quarterly Labour Force Survey 1994-2007 and recent UK Skills Surveys (1992, 1997, 2001 and 2006) Theme: use of “overqualification” to help understand trends in the returns to graduate education after the surge in HE participation • Trends in the dispersion of returns to graduate education: quantile regressions • Definition and decomposition of overqualification • Trends in overqualification • Trends in the costs of overqualification • Linking the trends
Motivation • Figure shows proportion of 25-59 year olds who record having a first degree in UK QLFS 1994–2006, by birth cohorts (by year when aged 19) (Walker & Zhu, SJoE 2008 Fig 1) • huge increases in HE participation over a short period of time • More than 50% increase for men • Doubling for women
Measure of stock of graduates • Figure updated with two additional years of data (up to Dec 2009) • It shows share of graduates in the labour force (proportion of 25-60 year olds with NVQ 4+) • Rapid rise throughout period. • For women an apparent acceleration after 2002
Returns to graduate education • Key research question: If the increased participation persists, when if ever will there be a decline in the returns to graduate education? • General stability or rise over 1980s and 1990s: • Machin, 2003 • Elias and Purcell, 2004; Mason, 2002 • Some hints of falling returns from: • Purcell et al., 2005 • Sloane, 2005 • Walker and Zhu, 2008