Overeducation, skills and wage penalty: evidence for Spain using PIAAC data

Other authors

Universitat de Barcelona

Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)

Publication date

2019-04-11T07:53:55Z

2019-04-11T07:53:55Z

2016-07



Abstract

The literature on educational mismatches finds that overeducated workers suffer a wage penalty compared with properly educated workers with the same level of education. Recent literature also suggests that individuals' skill heterogeneity could explain wage differences between overeducated and properly matched workers. The hypothesis is that overeducated workers earn less due to their lower competences and skills in relative terms. However, that hypothesis has been rarely tested due to data limitations on individuals' skills. The aim of this paper is to test the individuals' skill heterogeneity theory in Spain using microdata from PIAAC, because it is one of the developed countries supporting the highest overeducation rates and where its adult population holds the lowest level of skills among a set of developed countries. Our hypothesis is that the wage penalty of overeducation in Spain is explained by the lower skill level of overeducated workers. The obtained evidence confirms this hypothesis but only to a certain extent as skills only explain partially the wage penalty of overeducation.

Document Type

Article


Submitted version

Language

English

Publisher

Social Indicators Research

Related items

Social Indicators Research, 2017, 134(1)

http://diposit.ub.edu/dspace/bitstream/2445/115649/1/663276.pdf

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ECO2013-41022-R

Recommended citation

Nieto, S. & Ramos, R. (2017). Overeducation, skills and wage penalty: evidence for Spain using PIAAC data. Social Indicators Research, 134(1), 219-236. doi: 10.1007/s11205-016-1423-1

0303-8300

1573-0921

10.1007/s11205-016-1423-1

Rights

(c) Author/s & (c) Journal

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Articles [153]