Education, Signaling and Mismatch
Abstract
We assess the importance education as a signal of workers skills and the e¤ects of poor signaling quality on labor market outcomes. We do so by merging a frictional labor market model with a signaling setup where there is a privately observed idiosyncratic component in the cost of education. Given that highly skilled workers cannot correctly signal their abilities, their wages will be lower and they will not be matched to the "right" vacancies, or may be unemployed. Skilled workers will then have lower incentives to move to high productivity markets. Furthermore, fewer vacancies will be created in labor markets where skills matter, and incentives for workers to invest in education will be lower. Overall, an economy where education is a noisier signal generates lower educational attainment, higher unemployment and lower productivity. In addition, we provide evidence suggesting that education plays a poor signaling role in Latin American countries. We then calibrate our model using Peruvian data, and through a quantitative exercise we show that this mechanism could be relevant to explain the relatively bad performance of labor markets in Latin American countries.
Country / Region
Date
2016-06Cite this publication
Belongs to collection
Author
Arozamena, LeandroRuffo, Hernán
Items Relacionados
Education, signaling and the allocation of entrepreneurial skills
We assess the allocative importance of education when workers can choose to self-employ. To do so, we build a model combining educational choices with ...
A Taxonomy of Colombia’s Informal Labor Market
A taxonomy of the informal labor market is extremely important to understand and handle informality, particularly in a country as Colombia where this ...
Predicting Individual Wellbeing Through Test Scores: Evidence from a National Assessment in Mexico
We construct two longitudinal datasets that record students’ test scores in a national standardized exam in Mexico and track students from the end of ...