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    Title: 過度教育與學用不符對台灣高等教育畢業生的薪資與工作滿意度影響
    The Effect of Overeducation and Skill Mismatch on Wage and Job Satisfaction of College Graduates in Taiwan
    Authors: 梁家瑜
    Liang, Chia-Yu
    Contributors: 莊奕琦
    Chuang, Yih-Chyi
    梁家瑜
    Liang, Chia-Yu
    Keywords: Taiwan
    TEPS-B
    Wages
    Job satisfaction
    Date: 2019
    Issue Date: 2019-04-01 15:14:34 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: none
    Overeducation and skill mismatch are two incidents commonly occurring when job-seeking. Imperfect information and the failure of market mechanisms can result in such mismatch. Job mobility and job competition theories state that overeducation can be voluntary, as job-seekers want to be more competitive than other candidates or expect a more promising career. Human capital theory points out that it is likely that graduates choose to be overeducated because they have too little experience and feel unprepared to do an adequate job. Overeducation, in particular, has been an issue since the expansion of higher education. Assignment theory explains that an increase in skilled labor brings about a lower wage, on average. These issues are strongly associated with the education and labor markets. This has definitely been a concern in Taiwan since the 1980s. These two items have the potential to influence both wages and job satisfaction. In this research, ordinary least squares (OLS), Heckman two-step, and inverse probability-weighting (IPW) estimates will be used to analyze wage effect. Probit models will be used to study job satisfaction. The first section of the research will use three methods and examine the effects on the entire highly-educated labor of the Taiwan Education Panel Survey-Beyond (TEPS-B) from the 2014 interview. After comparing three estimates, one will be adopted in further research of wage effect, and a probit model will be used for job satisfaction. This further research will stratify highly-educated graduates into six groups: gender, ranking, profession, institution, ownership, and industries. In the specification of gender, women claim less overeducation but have a higher wage penalty than men. Top 10, medical, and public graduation have stronger effects on wages and satisfaction. This indicates that Taiwanese elite universities have an impairment regarding educational distribution and therefore not every graduate takes a job as he or she expects. Third industry workers have a lower effect on wage penalty and are more willing to be overeducated or skill mismatched.
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    Description: 碩士
    國立政治大學
    應用經濟與社會發展英語碩士學位學程(IMES)
    1052660031
    Source URI: http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/record/#G1052660031
    Data Type: thesis
    DOI: 10.6814/THE.NCCU.IMES.002.2019.F06
    Appears in Collections:[International Master`s Program of Applied Economics and Social Development] Theses

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