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Berufswahl

Was will ich werden? Welche Ausbildung, welches Studium passt zu mir und bietet langfristig sichere Perspektiven auf dem Arbeitsmarkt? Die Wahl eines Berufes gehört zu den wichtigen biographischen Weichenstellungen, auch wenn sie heute keine Festlegung für ein ganzes (Berufs-)leben mehr darstellt. Sie hat Auswirkungen auf die spätere ökonomische Sicherheit, den sozialen Status und auf Chancen zur Entfaltung der Persönlichkeit.
Dieses Themendossier bietet eine Auswahl von Literatur- und Forschungsprojektnachweisen zur Berufswahlforschung in Deutschland und anderen Ländern. Sie gibt einen Überblick über theoretische Ansätze und empirische Befunde zur Erklärung des Berufswahlverhaltens, zu Motiven der Berufswahl bei besonderen Personengruppen sowie zu Bestimmungsgründen und Einflussfaktoren bei der Entscheidungsfindung.
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  • Literaturhinweis

    Uncertainty and change in American youth occupational expectations (2023)

    Adamuti-Trache, Maria; Zhang, Yi Leaf;

    Zitatform

    Adamuti-Trache, Maria & Yi Leaf Zhang (2023): Uncertainty and change in American youth occupational expectations. In: Journal of education and work, Jg. 36, H. 3, S. 202-219. DOI:10.1080/13639080.2023.2174956

    Abstract

    "Grounded in Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT), this study contributes to empirical efforts to understand factors affecting the career-development process of American youth by focusing on change in occupational expectations between age 16 and 26. The study is based on the secondary analysis of longitudinal data from the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002. The main result is that occupational expectations decrease over time, and the change is strongly affected by student educational expectations and actual attainment by age 26. The study findings indicate that higher educational attainment leads to stability in occupational expectations and higher prestige scores of the intended occupations. Females are more likely than males to have higher occupational expectations. Academic self-efficacy and self-regulatory behaviours during secondary education lead to higher occupational expectations, as does an understanding of employment barriers. Non-college-bound youth and postsecondary non-completers experience a higher drop in occupational expectations over time which could reveal unrealistic career plans." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Inheritance of fields of study (2023)

    Altmejd, Adam ;

    Zitatform

    Altmejd, Adam (2023): Inheritance of fields of study. (Working papers / Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy 2023,11), Uppsala, 60 S.

    Abstract

    "University graduates are more than three times as likely to hold a degree in the field that their parent graduated from. To estimate how much of this association is caused by the educational choices of parents, I exploit admission thresholds to university programs in a regression discontinuity design. I study individuals who applied to Swedish universities between 1977 and 1992 and evaluate how their enrollment in different fields of study increases the probability that their children later study the same topic. I find strong causal influence. At the aggregate level, children become 50% more likely to graduate from a field if their parent has previously enrolled in it. The effect is positive for most fields, but varies substantially in size. Technology, engineering, medicine, business exhibit the largest, significant, effects. For these fields, parental enrollment increases child graduation probability with between 2.0 and 12.8 percentage points. I show that the parent’s labor market experience plays an important role in explaining the results, but parental field enrollment does not increase subject-specific skills, nor is it associated with higher returns to earnings. I find little evidence for comparative advantage being the key driver of field inheritance. Rather, parents seem to function as role models, making their own field choice salient. This is indicated by the fact that children become less likely to follow parents with weak labor market prospects, and that children are more likely to follow the parent with the same gender." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Occupational aspirations at the end of compulsory schooling: The interplay of parents' educational background, work values and self-Concepts in the reproduction of inequality (2023)

    Astleithner, Franz ; Vogl, Susanne ; Kogler, Raphaela ;

    Zitatform

    Astleithner, Franz, Susanne Vogl & Raphaela Kogler (2023): Occupational aspirations at the end of compulsory schooling: The interplay of parents' educational background, work values and self-Concepts in the reproduction of inequality. In: Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie, Jg. 48, H. 3, S. 333-358. DOI:10.1007/s11614-023-00541-3

    Abstract

    "Am Ende der Sekundarstufe I stehen Entscheidungen über die weitere Schul- oder Berufsausbildung und bestimmen den schulischen und beruflichen Werdegang. Das Verständnis der Entscheidungsprozesse während dieses Übergangs hilft, die generationsübergreifende Reproduktion von Ungleichheit aufzuklären. Ziel dieser Studie ist es, die Einflüsse auf Berufswünsche und die Art und Weise, wie der Bildungsstand der Eltern sie prägt, zu verstehen. Wir haben Daten aus einer Online-Umfrage unter 3078 Schülern im Alter von etwa 15 Jahren in der allgemeinbildenden Schule der Neuen Mittelschule in Wien (Österreich) analysiert. Basierend auf Regressionsanalysen und Pfadmodellen zeigen wir, dass der Bildungshintergrund mit den Berufswünschen zusammenhängt. Arbeitswerte, Einstellungen zur Schule und Sozialkapital prägen Berufswünsche, können aber nicht (vollständig) durch den Bildungshintergrund erklärt werden. Darüber hinaus finden wir keine Hinweise darauf, dass die Kontrollüberzeugung das Niveau der beruflichen Ambitionen beeinflusst." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku, © Springer-Verlag)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Übergänge von der Schule in den Beruf: Kann Deutschland von der Schweiz lernen? (2023)

    Bellmann, Lutz ; Schmid, Günther;

    Zitatform

    Bellmann, Lutz & Günther Schmid (2023): Übergänge von der Schule in den Beruf: Kann Deutschland von der Schweiz lernen? (WZB discussion paper : Emeriti EME 2023-001), Berlin, 47 S.

    Abstract

    "Obwohl sich das duale System der Berufsausbildung im Hinblick auf die Integration von jungen Menschen in das Bildungs- und Beschäftigungssystem generell als erfolgreich erwiesen hat, bestehen erhebliche Unterschiede in der Governance. Dementsprechend variieren Bildungs- und Beschäftigungsniveaus sowie die Risiken von NEET (neither in employment, nor in education and training), Arbeitslosigkeit und Armut. Nicht erst seit der COVID-19-Pandemie wird das deutsche System der Berufsausbildung aus vielen Gründen stark kritisiert, während das entsprechende System in der Schweiz eher positiv gewürdigt wird. Deshalb vergleichen wir die beiden Steuerungssysteme des Übergangs von der Schule in den Beruf. Vor dem Hintergrund der Theorie der Übergangsarbeitsmärkte betrachten wir die jeweiligen Ordnungen, Akteure, Übergangspfade und aktuellen Entwicklungen. Danach präsentieren wir unsere Bewertung: Deutschland kann von der Schweiz lernen, insbesondere hinsichtlich der Schaffung verlässlicher Brücken zwischen verschiedenen Ausbildungs- und Erwerbsverläufen, der Verbesserungen im Bereich der Berufsorientierung, der laufenden Aktualisierung der Berufsbildungs-Curricula durch verbindliche Vereinbarungen, der Modularisierung und nachhaltigen Finanzierung der beruflichen Bildungsgänge. Überlegungen zu konkreten und grundlegenden Reformoptionen bilden den Abschluss." (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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    Bellmann, Lutz ;
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  • Literaturhinweis

    The impact of field of study on the gender wage gap: evidence from the first job offer out of college (2023)

    Choi, Koangsung; Renna, Francesco ; Choe, Chung ;

    Zitatform

    Choi, Koangsung, Francesco Renna & Chung Choe (2023): The impact of field of study on the gender wage gap: evidence from the first job offer out of college. In: Applied Economics online erschienen am 31.10.2023, S. 1-17. DOI:10.1080/00036846.2023.2276078

    Abstract

    "Using a sample of recently graduated college students from South Korea, we estimate the effects of the between-majors and within-major gender wage gap. We use a recentered influence function to decompose the wage differential between majors and find that women face a higher rate of return to the field of study. In addition, women tend to select their program of study with the intention of optimizing their earnings potential relative to men. In calculating the within-major gender wage gap, we control for selectivity into a field of study extending the current methodology to a multinomial logit setting. We test our model using a sample of new graduates from South Korea. We consider six college majors. The within-major wage differential ranged from 8.2% for natural science graduates to 17% for social science graduates. After selection is accounted for, the gender wage gap becomes smaller in humanities graduates but increases in natural science and medicine graduates. Decomposing the selection correction term into explained and unexplained factors eliminates discrimination in medicine and points to reverse discrimination in natural science." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Coordinated markets, school-to-work linkages, and labor market outcomes in Europe (2023)

    DiPrete, Thomas A. ; Chae, Joanna;

    Zitatform

    DiPrete, Thomas A. & Joanna Chae (2023): Coordinated markets, school-to-work linkages, and labor market outcomes in Europe. In: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Jg. 87 1-19. DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2023.100840

    Abstract

    "A large literature has theorized about the importance of skill formation systems for labor market outcomes. Focusing on twenty two European countries, this paper establishes that countries differ in the strength of the pathways that connect educational credentials to the occupational structure. Pathway strength matters for the quality of occupational matching, for employment and earnings, and for the earnings gap between well matched and less well-matched workers. Systematic country differences matter most clearly in their implications for the average strength of linkage between educational credentials and the occupational structure. The strength of the association between local linkage strength and labor market outcomes may also vary by country or across the various country clusters that have been identified in the institutional literature. However, the considerable within-country heterogeneity in the cross-country rankings of individual pathways implies that one needs to look within countries to understand pathway structure and its connection with career progression and labor market outcomes." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2023 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Wage and Earnings Inequality Between and Within Occupations: The Role of Labor Supply (2023)

    Erosa, Andrés; Kambourov, Gueorgui; Fuster, Luisa; Rogerson, Richard;

    Zitatform

    Erosa, Andrés, Luisa Fuster, Gueorgui Kambourov & Richard Rogerson (2023): Wage and Earnings Inequality Between and Within Occupations: The Role of Labor Supply. (NBER working paper / National Bureau of Economic Research 31665), Cambridge, Mass, 37 S.

    Abstract

    "We document systematic differences in wage and earnings inequality between and within occupations and show that these differences are intimately related to systematic differences in labor supply across occupations. We then develop a variant of a Roy model in which earnings are a non-linear function of hours, with the extent of this non-linearity differing across occupations. In our theory, the interplay between heterogeneity in tastes for leisure and occupational differences in non-linearities affects the sorting of workers. Moreover, this interplay is crucial to account for the facts on the distributions of hours, wages, and earnings within and across occupations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Occupational sorting and the transmission of self-employment between generations (2023)

    Gimenez-Nadal, Jose Ignacio ; Molina, Jose Alberto; Velilla, Jorge ;

    Zitatform

    Gimenez-Nadal, Jose Ignacio, Jose Alberto Molina & Jorge Velilla (2023): Occupational sorting and the transmission of self-employment between generations. In: Applied Economics Letters, Jg. 30, H. 12, S. 1631-1634. DOI:10.1080/13504851.2022.2074354

    Abstract

    "Existing research has focused on factors explaining self-employment decisions, and the intergenerational transmission of self-employment has been posited as one explanatory factor. However, findings differ across countries, and the channels for such transmission remain unclear. Using data from the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions, we analyse whether working in the same occupation as parents, conditional on parents’ self-employment, is related to being self-employed. Results show that working in the same occupation as parents is statistically and significantly related to being self-employed, which may indicate the existence of intergenerational transmission of self-employment. Furthermore, this relationship is especially significant between fathers and sons." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    University peers and career prospects: The impact of university ties on early labor market outcomes (2023)

    Ilyés, Virág ; Sebők, Anna;

    Zitatform

    Ilyés, Virág & Anna Sebők (2023): University peers and career prospects: The impact of university ties on early labor market outcomes. In: Economics of Education Review, Jg. 96. DOI:10.1016/j.econedurev.2023.102456

    Abstract

    "By using extensive Hungarian administrative data, this study aims to provide empirical evidence that former university ties strongly influence the labour market outcomes of individuals, even early in their careers. The estimates focus on the early career paths of graduates who obtained a master's degree between 2010 and 2017. As direct information on social contacts is not available in the dataset, we proxy university peers as students who started and finished the same university programmes (bachelor's or master's) in the same semester. Our results suggest that individuals are more likely to get hired by given firms if their former peers work there. The measured effects are considered significant and quite robust, even after controlling for the important sources of potential bias. Although we cannot present exact proof of the direct help of contacts, we provide suggestive evidence that seems to confirm the existence of such assistance. Our findings also revealed that the measured benefits are mainly attributable to connections from bachelor's studies. The effect of master's peers is mostly driven by the selection of individuals alongside prevalent study track-firm pathways. By comparing entries into new firms with and without peers, we also show that graduates with links have better labor market outcomes after hiring: they earn higher wages, obtain better and more prestigious positions, and stay longer at their new firm. The results draw attention to the importance of university peers in the labour market and contribute to the discussions about the determinants of early labour market success." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2023 Elsevier) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Jobseekers’ Beliefs about Comparative Advantage and (Mis)Directed Search (2023)

    Kiss, Andrea; Garlick, Robert; Orkin, Kate; Hensel, Lukas;

    Zitatform

    Kiss, Andrea, Robert Garlick, Kate Orkin & Lukas Hensel (2023): Jobseekers’ Beliefs about Comparative Advantage and (Mis)Directed Search. (Upjohn Institute working paper 388), Kalamazoo, Mich., 99 S. DOI:10.17848/wp23-388

    Abstract

    "Worker sorting into tasks and occupations has long been recognized as an important feature of labor markets. But this sorting may be inefficient if jobseekers have inaccurate beliefs about their skills and therefore apply to jobs that do not match their skills. To test this idea, we measure young South African jobseekers’ communication and numeracy skills and their beliefs about their skill levels. Many jobseekers believe they are better at the skill in which they score lower, relative to other jobseekers. These beliefs predict the skill requirements of jobs where they apply. In two field experiments, giving jobseekers their skill assessment results shifts their beliefs toward their assessment results. It also redirects their search toward jobs that value the skill in which they score relatively higher—using measures from administrative, incentivized task, and survey data—but does not increase total search effort. It also raises earnings and job quality, consistent with inefficient sorting due to limited information." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Auswirkungen von Berufswahl, Erwerbsunterbrechungen und Teilzeitarbeit auf das Lebenseinkommen von Frauen: Zentrale Ergebnisse und Schlussfolgerungen einer aktuellen Studie im Auftrag des AMS Österreich (2023)

    Mayrhuber, Christine;

    Zitatform

    Mayrhuber, Christine (2023): Auswirkungen von Berufswahl, Erwerbsunterbrechungen und Teilzeitarbeit auf das Lebenseinkommen von Frauen: Zentrale Ergebnisse und Schlussfolgerungen einer aktuellen Studie im Auftrag des AMS Österreich. (AMS-Info / Arbeitsmarktservice Österreich 576), Wien, 4 S.

    Abstract

    "(...) Die vorliegende Studie ist eine Aktualisierung wie auch Erweiterung einer Studie aus 2017. Im ersten Abschnitt wird die Arbeitsmarktintegration der Frauen in Österreich entlang der Dimensionen Arbeitszeit und Einkommen analysiert. Die Datengrundlage sowie die Annahmen zu den modellierten Erwerbs- und Einkommensverläufen finden sich im zweiten Abschnitt. Der dritte Abschnitt behandelt die strukturellen Unterschiede der Erwerbseinkommens- summen entlang unterschiedlicher Wirtschaftsbranchen und Berufe, die Frauen ohne Erwerbsunterbrechungen haben. Ein Vergleich der Erwerbseinkommen bei durchgängigen Erwerbsverläufen zeigt, dass die strukturellen Verdienstunterschiede zwischen den Wirtschaftsklassen im Hinblick auf die Lebenseinkommensmöglichkeiten bedeutender sind, als die Effekte von vorübergehenden Teilzeitphasen. Im vierten Abschnitt sind die Ergebnisse der modellierten elf hypothetischen Erwerbsbiographien auf die Erwerbs- und Pensionseinkommen der Frauen festgehalten. Im ersten Teil sind die Unterschiede der summieren Erwerbseinkommen diskutiert, die Vollzeit- und Teilzeiterwerbstätigkeit nach sich zieht. Des Weiteren wird gezeigt, welche Auswirkungen sowohl Erwerbsunterbrechungen als auch Teilzeitarbeitsphasen auf das Lebenseinkommen in fünf unterschiedlichen Berufen und fünf unterschiedlichen Wirtschaftsbranchen haben. (...)" (Autorenreferat, IAB-Doku)

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Skills, Aspirations, and Occupations (2023)

    Orellana, Alexis; Tan, Kegon Teng Kok;

    Zitatform

    Orellana, Alexis & Kegon Teng Kok Tan (2023): Skills, Aspirations, and Occupations. (HCEO working paper / Human capital and economic opportunity global working group 2023,027), Chicago, Ill., 44 S.

    Abstract

    "It is well documented that children often "inherit" the occupations of their parents. This paper studies the role of early occupational aspirations in determining later life outcomes, a potentially important channel for intergenerational correlations in occupations. Using the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, we estimate a lifecycle model of college choice and occupation choice to quantify the effect of aspirations on education and wages. We find that aspirations have a sizeable impact on educational attainment and wages, even conditional on latent skills that we recover from the choice model. We also simulate the importance of family background conditional on skills through the strong correlation between family background and aspirations. Our findings suggest that aspirations may be a valuable lever for reducing intergenerational inequality." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Social norms and gendered occupational choices of men and women: Time to turn the tide? (2023)

    Palffy, Patricia ; Backes-Gellner, Uschi ; Lehnert, Patrick;

    Zitatform

    Palffy, Patricia, Patrick Lehnert & Uschi Backes-Gellner (2023): Social norms and gendered occupational choices of men and women: Time to turn the tide? In: Industrial Relations, Jg. 62, H. 4, S. 380-410. DOI:10.1111/irel.12332

    Abstract

    "We analyze the relationship between social gender norms and adolescents' occupational choices by combining regional votes on constitutional amendments on gender equality with job application data from a large job board for apprenticeships. The results show that adolescent males in regions with stronger traditional social gender norms are more likely to apply for typically male occupations. This finding does not hold for females, suggesting that incentivizing men to break the norms and choose gender-atypical occupations (e.g., in healthcare) can be even more effective in accelerating advancement toward gender equality in the labor market than incentivizing women to choose STEM occupations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Career Preferences and Socio-Economic Background (2023)

    Schüle, Paul;

    Zitatform

    Schüle, Paul (2023): Career Preferences and Socio-Economic Background. (Ifo working papers 395), München, 50 S.

    Abstract

    "Career decisions, that is educational and occupational choice, are not only made by comparing expected incomes, but also by considering non-monetary rewards like social impact, chances of promotion, or the compatibility of work and family. In this paper, I use rich panel data from Germany to show that preferences about such aspects of a career as stated at age 17 are strong predictors of future earnings in the labor market. At the same time, these preferences differ significantly by socioeconomic background, and intergenerational income persistence is reduced by 8–22 percent when accounting for career preferences." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Gender differences and similarities in work preferences: Results from a factorial survey experiment (2023)

    Seehuus, Sara ;

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    Seehuus, Sara (2023): Gender differences and similarities in work preferences: Results from a factorial survey experiment. In: Acta sociologica, Jg. 66, H. 1, S. 5-25. DOI:10.1177/00016993211060241

    Abstract

    "Despite increased gender equality in many arenas in most of the Western world, women and men continue to choose different educational paths; this is one reason for the persistent gender segregation in the labour market. Cultural and economic explanations for occupational gender segregation both contend that gendered career choices reflect gendered preferences. By analysing data from a multifactorial survey experiment conducted in Norway, designed to isolate the preferences for occupations from preferences for job attributes with which occupation is often correlated: pay; type of position; and amount of work, this article examines whether and to what extent boys and girls who have not yet entered the labour market have different preferences for different work dimensions. The study shows some gender differences in occupational preferences, while also demonstrating similarities in boys’ and girls’ preferences for work dimensions, such as pay and working hours. This indicates that attributes tested by the experiment, which are typically associated with gendered occupations, cannot independently explain why boys and girls tend to have divergent occupational preferences. Importantly, however, the results suggest that boys’ reluctance to undertake some female-typed occupations might be reduced if they did not pay less than male-typed occupations requiring the same level of education." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The Impact of Female Teachers on Female Students' Lifetime Well-Being (2022)

    Card, David; Sanders, Seth G.; Udalova, Victoria; Taylor, Lowell; Domnisoru, Ciprian;

    Zitatform

    Card, David, Ciprian Domnisoru, Seth G. Sanders, Lowell Taylor & Victoria Udalova (2022): The Impact of Female Teachers on Female Students' Lifetime Well-Being. (NBER working paper 30430), Cambridge, Mass, 76 S. DOI:10.3386/w30430

    Abstract

    "It is widely believed that female students benefit from being taught by female teachers, particularly when those teachers serve as counter-stereotypical role models. We study education in rural areas of the US circa 1940 - a setting in which there were few professional female exemplars other than teachers - and find that female students were more successful when their primary-school teachers were disproportionately female. Impacts are lifelong: female students taught by female teachers were more likely to move up the educational ladder by completing high school and attending college, and had higher lifetime family income and increased longevity." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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    Counter-stereotypical female role models and women's occupational choices (2022)

    Chhaochharia, Vidhi; Niessen-Ruenzi, Alexandra ; Du, Mengqiao;

    Zitatform

    Chhaochharia, Vidhi, Mengqiao Du & Alexandra Niessen-Ruenzi (2022): Counter-stereotypical female role models and women's occupational choices. In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Jg. 196, S. 501-523. DOI:10.1016/j.jebo.2022.02.009

    Abstract

    "This paper examines the relation between counter-stereotypical female role models and women's labor supply and occupational choices. Using hand-collected data from Gallup surveys that cover more than 50 years, we create a direct measure of counter-stereotypical female role models based on the fraction of local survey respondents who state that they admire famous women in business, politics, or science. We show that admiring counter-stereotypical female role models is associated with more women participating in the labor market, working in male-dominated and STEM industries, and taking managerial positions, which eventually alleviates the gender pay gap." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku, © 2022 Elsevier) ((en))

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    The Full Returns to the Choice of Occupation and Education (2022)

    Clark, Andrew E. ; Cotofan, Maria; Layard, Richard;

    Zitatform

    Clark, Andrew E., Maria Cotofan & Richard Layard (2022): The Full Returns to the Choice of Occupation and Education. (IZA discussion paper 15279), Bonn, 57 S.

    Abstract

    "Information on both earnings and non-pecuniary rewards is needed to understand the occupational dispersion of wellbeing. We analyse subjective wellbeing in a large UK sample to construct a measure of "full earnings", the sum of earnings and the value of non-pecuniary rewards, in 90 different occupations. Labour-market inequality is underestimated: the dispersion of full earnings is one-third larger than the dispersion of earnings. Equally, the gender and ethnic gaps in the labour market are larger than those in earnings alone, and the full returns to education on the labour market are underestimated. These results are similar in data on US workers. In neither cross-section nor panel data do we find evidence of compensating differentials." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    Social selectivity and gender-segregation across fields of study: Comparative evidence from Austria (2022)

    Lessky, Franziska ; Nairz, Erna; Wurzer, Marcus;

    Zitatform

    Lessky, Franziska, Erna Nairz & Marcus Wurzer (2022): Social selectivity and gender-segregation across fields of study: Comparative evidence from Austria. In: International Journal of Comparative Sociology, Jg. 63, H. 4, S. 201-221. DOI:10.1177/00207152221099171

    Abstract

    "This study explores stratification within the Austrian university system by focusing on social selectivity and gender-segregation across fields of study. We investigate how much the choice of field of study is associated with parental educational background and the gender of the students—especially, how these characteristics vary across individual (teaching) subjects. Teacher training is often regarded as typically chosen by women and preferred by so-called educational climbers. However, previous studies focus on clusters of fields of study and do not take into account the differences between individual (teaching) subjects. We address this research gap by focusing on a comparison between those who have chosen to undergo a teaching program in a specific subject and those who have studied this specific subject without pedagogical training. By using administrative data from first-year students at Austrian state universities (N = 23,400) in 2016–2017, and applying logistic regression analysis, the results demonstrate that in almost all analyzed fields of study, similar patterns of gender-segregation according to the choice of fields of study can be observed, regardless of whether it concerns a teacher training subject or a corresponding equivalent academic subject. Educational climbers tend to opt more frequently for teacher training subjects than for their corresponding fields—especially in some of the mathematics-oriented science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) subjects. We contribute to comparative sociological literature by introducing the approach of comparing teacher training subjects to their academic equivalents and revealing a more nuanced picture regarding horizontal inequalities in higher education." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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  • Literaturhinweis

    The effect of gender norms on gender-based sorting across occupations (2022)

    Marcén, Miriam ; Morales, Marina ;

    Zitatform

    Marcén, Miriam & Marina Morales (2022): The effect of gender norms on gender-based sorting across occupations. (GLO discussion paper / Global Labor Organization 1160), Essen, 41 S.

    Abstract

    "Despite the notable progress that has been made in bridging the gap between women and men in the world of work, women are still underrepresented in several occupations. In this article, the effect of gender norms on whether women enter male-dominated occupations is analysed using differences in gender equality among early-arrival migrants. The variations in gender norms according to the cultural backgrounds of those migrants by country of origin are exploited to identify their impact on occupational choices. Using data from the American Community Survey, it is found that greater gender equality in the country of origin reduces the gender gap in male-dominated occupations. Suggestive evidence is further shown on the roles of job flexibility and women's relative preferences for family-friendly jobs in shaping gender-based sorting across occupations." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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