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Skills, Signals, and Employability: An Experimental Investigation

Skills, Signals, and Employability: An Experimental Investigation

357/2018 Marc Piopiunik, Guido Schwerdt, Lisa Simon, and Ludger Woessmann
working papers,culture and development
European Economic Review
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2020.103374

357/2018 Marc Piopiunik, Guido Schwerdt, Lisa Simon, and Ludger Woessmann

As skills of labour-market entrants are usually not directly observed by employers, individuals acquire skill signals. To study which signals are valued by employers, we simultaneously and independently randomize a broad range of skill signals on pairs of resumes of fictitious applicants among which we ask a large representative sample of German human-resource managers to choose. We find that signals in all three studied domains – cognitive skills, social skills, and maturity – have a significant effect on being invited for a job interview. Consistent with the relevance, expectedness, and credibility of different signals, the specific signal that is effective in each domain differs between apprenticeship applicants and college graduates. While GPAs and social skills are significant for both genders, males are particularly rewarded for maturity and females for IT and language skills. Older HR managers value school grades less and other signals more, whereas HR managers in larger firms value college grades more.

Culture and development

European Economic Review

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2020.103374