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Lifelong learning inequality? The relevance of family background for on-the-job training

Abstract

"Despite ample evidence on intergenerational persistence of formal education as well as on the determinants of non-formal training, these issues have not yet been analysed jointly. The question remains whether people from low-qualified family backgrounds make up for their relatively sparse own formal education by means of non-formal training during adulthood. Hypotheses based on economic theory and findings from various other disciplines suggest otherwise. I use the German ALWA survey to estimate the influence of family background on non-formal training participation. Count data analyses show that a low-qualified family background is negatively related to both likelihood and frequency of on-the-job training. This result holds when controlling for education, ability and personality as well as job and firm characteristics." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))

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Antoni, M. (2011): Lifelong learning inequality? The relevance of family background for on-the-job training. (IAB-Discussion Paper 09/2011), Nürnberg, 35 p.

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