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Career trajectories into undereducation: Which skills and resources substitute formal education in the intergenerational transmission of advantage?
[journal article]
Abstract A significant share of employees in Europe has less formal training than is required by their job; they are undereducated. We use harmonized panel data from the United Kingdom and Germany to investigate the skills and resources allowing the undereducated to develop careers in occupations supposedly ... view more
A significant share of employees in Europe has less formal training than is required by their job; they are undereducated. We use harmonized panel data from the United Kingdom and Germany to investigate the skills and resources allowing the undereducated to develop careers in occupations supposedly beyond their reach. Our theoretical approach complements individual-centered labor market theory with an intergenerational mobility perspective which regards undereducation as a form of family status maintenance. Our empirical results show that persons whose (non-)cognitive skills exceed their formal education are more likely to be undereducated in the cross-section, and to enter undereducated employment or be promoted into it throughout the life course. Yet beyond individual merit, parental socio-economic status is a similarly-important predictor of these outcomes; our analyses even trace a significant share of the importance of (non-)cognitive skills to it. To complete our intergenerational argument, we finally demonstrate that undereducation acts as a pathway to the intergenerational reproduction of earnings inequality - more so, in fact, than the avoidance of overeducation. These results are remarkably similar across the UK and Germany, although some country differences suggest higher skill-induced career mobility in Britain and stronger origin effects in Germany. We discuss promising avenues for further comparative research in the conclusion.... view less
Keywords
intergenerational mobility; social background; socioeconomic factors; Federal Republic of Germany; social mobility; level of qualification; level of education; Great Britain; career
Classification
General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories
Free Keywords
direct effects of social origin; job-education mismatches; non-cognitive skills; undereducation; UK Longitudinal Household Study 2009-2016 (UKHLS); German Socio-Economic Panel Study 2004-2016 (SOEP)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Journal
Research in Social Stratification and Mobility (2020) 68
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/10419/222491
ISSN
1878-5654
Status
Postprint; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0