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Abstract:
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Overeducation raises concerns that governments may be overinvesting in
education. To inform the debate, this paper studies the impact of
overeducation on productivity. We advance the literature by considering that
returns to overeducation may be due both to productivity and signalling
effects. To disentangle both effects, we apply Wolpin’s (1977) methodology
and compare the rates of return of screened (employed) and unscreened (selfemployed)
workers. To overcome well-known endogeneity problems due to
unobserved heterogeneity, we estimate a panel with individual and
employment-status fixed effects. Our results show that signalling effects are
relevant and that overeducation does not carry a productivity penalty.
Keywords: Overeducation, signalling model, human capital model, unobserved
heterogeneity.
JEL classification: I20, J24, J31. |