Employability of young graduates in Europe

被引:13
|
作者
Garrouste, Christelle Laetitia [1 ]
Rodrigues, Margarida [2 ]
机构
[1] LEO, Dept Econ, Orleans, France
[2] JRC IPSC, Ispra, Italy
关键词
Work experience; Contracts; Higher education; Employability benchmark; Degree fields; WORK; EDUCATION; CAREER; JOB;
D O I
10.1108/IJM-05-2013-0106
中图分类号
F24 [劳动经济];
学科分类号
020106 ; 020207 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to measure the potential role of the field of education and the fact of having worked during studies on the employability of the higher educated (ISCED 5-6) cohort targeted by the ET2020 graduates' employability benchmark. Design/methodology/approach - Using the same data source as the benchmark (i.e. the annual LFS microdata from 2004 to 2010), and exploring the additional transition questions collected in the LFS 2009 ad hoc module, the authors define and test four hypotheses using a probit approach on each EU country. Findings - The degree plays a significant role in the employability of young graduates across countries and time. In terms of probability of employment, the leading field is health and welfare. In terms of type of contracts, the leading fields are social sciences and engineering. Moreover, what labour markets seem to value the most is the capacity of higher educated students to combine high-level studies and work, i.e. a high workload capacity and intellectual flexibility. Practical implications - Reaching the new European target of a minimum of 82 per cent of employment of young graduates will require countries to invest wisely in the most "employable" fields of education. This analysis will help policy makers in their future orientations towards that target. Originality/value - The originality of this work lies in its exploration of the exact same extraction of microdata used for the computation of the ET2020 Benchmark indictor and in its immediate political implications for the monitoring of this benchmark.
引用
收藏
页码:425 / 447
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Admission conditions and graduates' employability
    Alexandre, Fernando
    Portela, Miguel
    Sa, Carla
    STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2009, 34 (07) : 795 - 805
  • [12] COMPETENCY-BASED HIGH EDUCATION AND YOUNG GRADUATES' EMPLOYABILITY: THE CASE OF SPAIN
    Exposito Garcia, Alfonso
    Sanchez Lissen, Rocio
    ICERI2015: 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION, 2015, : 6138 - 6145
  • [13] An analysis of the employability of Spanish graduates through the Horizontal Match
    Rodriguez-Esteban, Agustin
    Vidal, Javier
    Vieira, Maria-Jose
    REVISTA DE EDUCACION, 2019, (384): : 221 - 245
  • [14] Contributions of Employability Capitals to the Employability of Chinese International Graduates in Australia
    Tang, Melody
    Pham, Thanh
    Saito, Eisuke
    JOURNAL OF STUDIES IN INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION, 2024,
  • [15] Serious gaming for graduates employability enhancement
    Yanes, Nacim
    Bououd, Ikram
    Jamel, Leila
    Alturki, Nazik
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [16] EMPLOYABILITY OF UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES GRADUATES
    Glavas, Jerko
    Stanic, Milan
    Stanic Sulentic, Marina
    INTERDISCIPLINARY MANAGEMENT RESEARCH XIII, 2017, 13 : 825 - 840
  • [17] Graduates employability skills: A review of literature against market demand
    Osmani, Mohamad
    Weerakkody, Vishanth
    Hindi, Nitham
    Eldabi, Tillal
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATION FOR BUSINESS, 2019, 94 (07) : 423 - 432
  • [18] Employability and employment outcomes of nutrition science graduates: A qualitative exploration
    Barber, Charlotte
    Blair, Merran
    McCaffrey, Tracy A.
    Palermo, Claire
    NUTRITION & DIETETICS, 2023, 80 (03) : 253 - 261
  • [19] EMPLOYABILITY COMPETENCIES OF SOUTH AFRICAN HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT GRADUATES
    Chweu, G.
    Schultz, C.
    Jordaan, C.
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2023, 37 (04) : 40 - 61
  • [20] Educational programmes for future employability of graduates in SMEs
    Ingrid Hunt
    Emma O. Brien
    David Tormey
    Slyvia Alexander
    Eamonn Mc Quade
    Michael Hennessy
    Journal of Intelligent Manufacturing, 2013, 24 : 501 - 510