Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 19 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 68 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 137 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 283 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Psacharopoulos, George | 13 |
Jacobs, Johan | 8 |
Patrinos, Harry Anthony | 7 |
Marginson, Simon | 4 |
Carroll, David | 3 |
Connor, H. | 3 |
Dumbrell, Tom | 3 |
Farnham, David | 3 |
Green, Francis | 3 |
Groot, Wim | 3 |
Kiker, B. F. | 3 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 15 |
Administrators | 13 |
Policymakers | 10 |
Researchers | 6 |
Teachers | 6 |
Community | 2 |
Media Staff | 1 |
Students | 1 |
Location
Canada | 100 |
Australia | 87 |
United Kingdom | 82 |
United States | 64 |
Germany | 35 |
China | 25 |
France | 22 |
Spain | 22 |
Japan | 20 |
United Kingdom (Great Britain) | 20 |
Italy | 19 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Michael Baker; Yosh Halberstam; Kory Kroft; Alexandre Mas; Derek Messacar – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
We study the effects of the unionization of faculty at Canadian universities from 1970-2022 using an event-study design. Using administrative data which covers the full universe of faculty salaries, we find strong evidence that unionization leads to both average salary gains and compression of the distribution of salaries. Our estimates indicate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Unions, College Faculty, Salaries
Yaakov Gilboa – Journal of Education and Work, 2024
This study examines the return to a year of schooling and the 'wage penalty' of over-education in the Israeli labour market. I used 2014-2015 PIAAC survey data to examine whether the basic assumption of the ORU wage model, i.e. that the return to a year of over-education is independent of the level of education, is plausible. I find that in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Overachievement, Personnel Evaluation, Salary Wage Differentials
Tomasz Zajac; Iga Magda; Marek Bozykowski; Agnieszka Chlon-Dominczak; Mikolaj Jasinski – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
Gender pay gaps in earnings are well-documented in the literature. However, new factors contributing to women's lower earnings have emerged and remain under-researched. Educational choices are among them. We use a rich administrative dataset from Poland, a Central Eastern European country with high tertiary education enrolment and high female…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, STEM Education, STEM Careers, Females
Rose Stephenson – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2024
This comprehensive report delves into the persistent gender pay gap within the UK's higher education sector. Despite an environment where women are increasingly visible in both student and staff roles, a wage disparity remains, with women earning on average 11.9% less than their male counterparts across all roles. The report quantifies the gap and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Salary Wage Differentials, Comparable Worth, Sex Fairness
Ann Brower; Alex James – SAGE Open, 2023
We use 12 years of holistic research performance scores for each academic in all New Zealand universities to ask whether gendered gaps in pay, age, research performance score, and performance-adjusted pay are narrowing with time. We find that the gender gaps in age and research performance score narrowed from 2006 to 2018, but the gender gaps in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Research, Salary Wage Differentials
Delis, A.; Jones, C. – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
This study investigates whether the completion of an optional 'sandwich' work placement enhances graduate starting salaries. We use a variety of multivariate regression techniques to investigate this issue and find that the graduate starting salaries of students who took professional work placements were significantly higher by £1686 ($2105)…
Descriptors: Job Placement, College Graduates, Salaries, Salary Wage Differentials
Valentine Jacobs; Kevin Pineda-Hernández; François Rycx; Mélanie Volral – Education Economics, 2023
We provide first evidence of the impact of over-education, among natives and immigrants, on firm-level productivity and wages. Our results show that the over-education wage premium is higher for natives than for immigrants. However, since the differential in productivity gains associated with over-education outweighs the corresponding wage premium…
Descriptors: Salary Wage Differentials, Immigrants, Labor Force, Human Capital
Cultrera, L.; Mahy, B.; Rycx, F.; Vermeylen, G. – Education Economics, 2022
This paper is among the first to investigate the impact of over-education and over-skilling on workers' wages using a unique pan-European database covering twenty-eight countries for the year 2014, namely the CEDEFOP's European Skills and Jobs (ESJ) survey. Overall, the results suggest the existence of a wage penalty associated with…
Descriptors: Job Skills, Educational Attainment, Wages, Foreign Countries
Pawel Strawinski; Paulina Broniatowska – Educational Studies, 2024
This study investigates the impact of the extension of the duration of general education on educational opportunities and labour market performance. Taking the example of the Polish education reform of 1999, which we treated as a natural experiment, we used a regression discontinuity design and estimated the effects of an additional year of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Secondary Schools, Compulsory Education
Herrmann, Sonja; Nagel, Christian – Research in Higher Education, 2023
Research estimating the outcomes of higher education in Germany has widely ignored the private educational sector. This study focuses on labour market returns in terms of the income of graduates from private higher education institutions in Germany. Using data from the National Education Panel Study (NEPS) the results of the Bayesian regression…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Private Colleges, Public Colleges
Giulio Marini – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Brexit raised the question of whether the UK will continue to attract internationals. Here the focus is on academic staff - a critical component of the "War for Talents" discourse and current geopolitics in the field. Despite a clear trend of loss of EU internationals, at least among western EU countries, the UK more than compensates for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, International Educational Exchange, Faculty Recruitment
Passaretta, Giampiero; Sauer, Petra; Schwabe, Ulrike; WeBling, Katarina – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2023
Evidence on gender inequality in the labor market is extensive. However, little is known about the potential role of overeducation and horizontal mismatch in explaining women's labor-market disadvantages. We draw on recent data from the Eurograduate pilot survey to investigate the role of overeducation, field-of-study mismatch and field-specific…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Labor Market
Rakan Alhrahsheh – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2023
This study comprehensively examines the relationship between income and technology and its impact on health outcomes. The authors demonstrate how technology spending enhances well-being and contributes to GDP per capita by increasing labor force participation and production levels. Conversely, income growth leads to increased public health…
Descriptors: Income, Technology, Health, Social Life
Ksenia Rozhkova; Sergey Roshchin; Natalya Yemelina – European Journal of Education, 2024
This study provides new evidence of the gender wage gap among recent university graduates at different stages of their early career. Using a unique administrative dataset from Russia, we estimate the gender wage gap at means and across wage distribution for a cohort of 2018 university graduates during the first 4 years after graduation. We explore…
Descriptors: Gender Issues, Salary Wage Differentials, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Universities
Seonkyung Choi; Huihui Li; Keiichi Ogawa; Yoshiyuki Tanaka – International Journal of Training Research, 2024
Indonesia has prioritized upper secondary vocational education since 2006. This study examines the labour market outcomes of upper secondary vocational education in terms of decent work (DW), using Indonesian Family Life Survey data and a research framework that links DW into the broader labour economics of the school to work transition. We…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Vocational Education, Rural Urban Differences