The University of Sheffield
Department of Economics

Labour and education economics

A significant proportion of the department’s staff work in this field, therefore the range of topics we are researching is large. Much of this work is applied, and the group have an extensive knowledge of large-scale data sets, from both the UK and abroad. In addition, the most up-to-date econometric techniques appropriate for large cross-section and panel data sets are widely used.

Much of the work undertaken has direct policy relevance, and so the group have close links with government departments, in particular the Department for Education and Skills, and the Department for Work and Pensions. In addition, the group co-ordinate the Work Pensions and Labour Economics Study Group (WPEG), sponsored by DWP, which helps to disseminate research in this area to a wide audience of national and international academics and policy-makers, through regular seminars and an annual conference.

See also

Specific research areas:

Labour and Education

  • Job insecurity
  • The quality of jobs
  • The impact of the National Minimum Wage
  • Evaluation of labour market interventions
  • Risk preferences and how they affect labour market choices
  • Labour supply decisions
  • Labour market discrimination
  • Immigration
  • Higher Education (costs, drop-out)
  • The labour market returns to education
  • The match between the supply of and demand for skills
  • The provision of training

Current and recent projects in this area include:

Labour and Education
Title People Description Funder / Sponsor
Education and risk preference Sarah Brown, Aurora Ortiz and Karl Taylor This project explores the relationship between attitudes towards risk and educational attainment using data from the US Panel Study of Income Dynamics.

Brown, S., Ortiz, A. and K. Taylor (2006) 'Education Attainment and Risk Preference.' Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2006002

Brown, S., Garino, G. and K. Taylor (2006) 'Returns to Education and Risky Financial Investment.' Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2006012
Leverhume Trust
Reservation wages, unemployment and job search: A microeconomic analysis Sarah Brown and Karl Taylor We explore the determinants of the reservation wages of individuals who are unemployed and out of the labour market using data from the BHPS. We also explore the implications of reservation wage setting for future employment and the duration of unemployment.

Brown, S, J. Roberts and K. Taylor
‘Reservation Wages, Labour Market Participation and Health.’ Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2008002

Brown, S. and K. Taylor (2008) ‘Reservation Wages, Expected Wages and Labour Market Outcomes: Analysis of Individual Level Panel Data.’ Sheffield Economics Research Paper, 2008008

Brown, S. and K. Taylor (2009) ‘Reservation Wages, Expected wages and the Duration of Unemployment: Evidence from British Panel Data.’ Sheffield Economics Research Paper, 2009001
ESRC
Self-employment and risk preference Sarah Brown, Mike Dietrich, Aurora Ortiz and Karl Taylor Explores the relationship between risk preference and self-employment, focusing on the incidence, type and success of self-employment. Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2007008.  
Intergenerational mobility in basic skills Sarah Brown, Steven McIntosh and Karl Taylor This paper investigates the relationship between the reading and maths test scores, taken at age 7, of a cohort of individuals born in 1958, and the test scores of their children measured in 1991. We investigate whether the relationship observed is due to nature or nurture (genetics or upbringing) and find that upbringing is mainly responsible for the inter-generational relationship in reading, while genetic effects are more relevant to maths.  
Household finances and attitudes towards risk Sarah Brown and Karl Taylor (with Gaia Garino, University of Leicester) We explore the relationship between household finances (namely the level of unsecured debt and savings) and attitudes towards risk from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective. Our empirical analysis uses household level data from the US Panel Study of Income Dynamics.

Brown, S., G. Garino and K. Taylor ‘Household Finances and Attitudes towards Risk’ University of Sheffield Sheffield Economics Research Paper, 2008005
 
Modelling charitable donations at the household level Sarah Brown and Karl Taylor (with Mark N. Harris, Monash University) We explore the determinants of donations to charity at the household level using data from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics.

Brown, S., M. Harris and K. Taylor ‘Modelling Charitable Donations to an Unexpected Natural Disaster: Evidence from the US Panel Study of Income Dynamics’ University of Sheffield Sheffield Economics Research Paper, 2009015
 
Parental qualifications and child poverty in 2020 Andy Dickerson and Jo Lindley We examine the potential pay-off for child poverty of a general rise in skills levels in the adult population as outlined in the Leitch Review. Higher skill levels are associated with greater employment levels and better jobs, and this can all help to reduce child poverty. We estimate that the impact of achieving the Leitch ambitions could contribute to between a 2 and 5 percentage point reduction in the incidence of child poverty by 2020.

http://www.jrf.org.uk/publications/parental-qualifications-and-child-poverty-2020
Joseph Rowntree Foundation
Fears and realisations of job insecurity Andy Dickerson and Francis Green (Kent) We investigate the validity of subjective data on expectations of job loss and on the probability of re-employment consequent on job loss, by examining associations between expectations and realisations. We find that subjective expectations data reveal private information about subsequent realisations of both job loss and of subsequent re-employment. On average, employees overestimate the chance of losing their job; while they underestimate the difficulty of finding another job as good as the currently-held one. We recommend that survey items on employment insecurity should utilise a cardinal probability scale with discrete numerical descriptors. Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2009016 Fears and realisations of job insecurity
Post-16 education choices in rural areas Andy Dickerson and Steven McIntosh With the increase in the school leaving age to age 18 by 2015, it is important to know what barriers affect participation in post-16 education today. We investigate the role of rural location to see whether this has a discouraging influence on participation, perhaps because of the extra distances involved in travelling to school or college as compared to living in urban areas. We find that, on average, participation rates are approximately 3 percentage points higher in rural areas as compared to urban areas. When trying to account for this difference, the results are less clear cut – there is some evidence that differences in the characteristics of residents of rural and urban areas may account for this higher participation, but this finding is not replicated in all the data sets that we examine.
(DEFRA forthcoming)
Post-16 education choices in rural areas
Workplace training and job turnover Andy Dickerson and David Morris We investigate the impact of job training on labour mobility using the latest Labour Force Survey data. Individuals receiving training are marginally less likely to leave the firm in the subsequent period, suggesting that ‘poaching’ is not a problem in the modern UK labour market. We also examine whether individuals’ characteristics have an effect on the link between training and turnover.
The paper also illustrates the current state of the labour market by outlining the key variables that affect the receipt of training and briefly looks at what types of training types and funding methods are dominant.
Workplace training and job turnover
Educational Attainment Pamela Lenton Exploring the educational attainment at age 18 of those individuals who performed poorly at age 16.

Lenton P (2006) ‘Where should I go and what should I do? Routes through Further education.’ Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2006014
 
Over-education of UK graduates Jo Lindley (with Arnaud Chevalier, Royal Holloway) During the early 1990s, the proportion of UK graduates doubled over a very short period of time. This projects investigates the effect of the expansion on the labour market experience of recent UK graduates.  
Occupational mobility of ethnic minorities Jo Lindley (with Shirley Dex, Institute of Education) Investigates to what extent ethnic minority men and women are discriminated against in the UK labour market in terms of occupational mobility and earnings.  
Over-education of ethnic minorities Jo Lindley (with Shirley Dex, Institute of Education) Devises a new method for determining whether or not an individual is over-educated for the job that they do, and applies this to the situation of ethnic minority groups in the UK.

Dex, S. and Lindley, J. (2007) `Labour Market Job Matching for UK Minority Ethnic Groups,´ Discussion Papers in Economics, University of Sheffield, Working Paper 2007003
 
Panel data analysis of over-education Jo Lindley and Steven McIntosh Uses panel data from the British Household Panel Survey to investigate the issue of over-education, in particular considering the impact of unobserved characteristics on the likelihood of being over-educated, and the duration of over-education spells.

Lindley, J. and McIntosh, S. (2008) ‘A Panel Data Analysis of the Incidence and Impact of Over-Education.’ Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2008009
 
The social costs and benefits of apprenticeships in England Steven McIntosh Calculates the total costs of apprenticeships to the government, employers and apprentices, and compares to benefits in terms of higher productivity, to determine a social rate of return to apprenticeship.
McIntosh, S. (2007) `A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Apprenticeships and Other Vocational Qualifications,´ DfES Research Report 834
Department for Education and Skills
Non-certified learning Steven McIntosh (with Francis Green, University of Kent) Examines the extent of non-certified learning in the UK, how it compares to other countries, and how if affects wages and productivity.

Green, F., and McIntosh, S. (2006) `Non-Certified Learning and Skills: Variation Across Sectors and Countries and Links To Productivity.´ DTI Research Report 06/1670.
Department of Trade and Industry
Evaluation of the Want2Work pilots in Wales Steven McIntosh, Jo Lindley and Jennifer Roberts (with Richard Edlin and Carolyn Czoski-Murray, HEDS) Does the Want2work programme help to get people off incapacity benefit and back into the labour market, and what are the effects on their health?

Research Report
Welsh Assembly
Gender differentials in Mexico Gurleen Popli The project looks at the issue of gender pay gaps in both the formal and the informal sector of the economy. This research attempts to identify the effects of free trade on women in developing countries. An earlier working paper is available as Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2007001. University of Sheffield, Social Sciences Devolved Fund
Liberalisation and income distribution Gurleen Popli Examines the impact of trade liberalisation on inequality and poverty in both formal and informal sectors of the economy.

“Trade Liberalization and the Self-Employed in Mexico,” (G Popli). Forthcoming World Development

“Minimum Wages and Wage Structure in Mexico,” (D. Fairris, G. Popli and E. Zepeda). Review of Social Economy, 2008, vol. LXVI, no.2, June, pp. 181-208.

“The Rising Wage Inequality in Mexico, 1984-2000: A Distributional Analysis,” (G. Popli). Journal of Income Distribution, 2007, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 49-67.
 
Gender and labour markets Gurleen Popli Investigates the effects of free trade on the labour market outcomes for women in developing countries.

• ‘Gender and Wage Discrimination in Mexico: A Distributional Approach’. Mimeo 2007.
 
Skill formation in early childhood Gurleen Popli Explores the role of parental investment in skill formation in very young children.  
Health and retirement in the UK and in Germany Jennifer Roberts (with Nigel Rice and Andrew Jones (University of York) Examining the effect of health on the probability of early retirement in the context of the different pension and benefit systems.
See Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2007002 (forthcoming in Economic Modelling)
See Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2008012

Final report available here.
Anglo German Foundation for the Study of Industrial Society
Older people and part-time work in Britain and Ireland Jennifer Roberts (with Brenda Gannon Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, National University of Ireland, Galway) Considering the impact of health on the decision to work full-time or part-time for people aged over 50 in Britain and Ireland.
See Sheffield Economics Research Paper 2008013
 
FDI and labour market outcomes Karl Taylor (with Nigel Driffield, Sourafel Girma and Michael Henry) This project extends the existing literature on FDI and wage inequality. We do this in two ways. Firstly, we incorporate more precise measures of inward investment into the model, by allowing for differences in the effects between horizontal and vertical FDI. Secondly, after establishing the effects that inward investment has on wage inequality, we then analyse the reasons for this in terms of the wages paid to skilled and unskilled workers, and the effect that inward investment has on this. We illustrate the important differences that horizontal and vertical FDI have on both wages and wage inequality, and the importance of allowing for regional differences in the results. FDI nationally tends to increase wage inequality, while the local, effects are opposite. FDI into assisted areas tends to increase wage inequality nationally, when the MNEs purchase inputs in the local region. ESRC
The impact of macroeconomic shocks on education Christine Valente (with Sonia Bhalotra, University of Bristol) This research analyses the effect of exposure to macroeconomic shocks on educational attainment for a large number of developing countries.  
The cognitive gender gap in Africa Christine Valente (with Paul Atherton, Institute of Education) This research shows that girls perform significantly worse than boys in standardised tests in primary schools in Africa, and explores underlying mechanisms.  
Evaluation of an early intervention project to raise aspirations and reduce risky behaviour Christine Valente and Andy Dickerson (with Richard Disney, University of Nottingham) This research aims at evaluating the impact of an intervention in primary schools in Nottingham on subsequent school outcomes, antisocial behaviour, and teenage parenthood. Early Intervention Programme, Nottingham City Council.

For more information on our work in Labour and Education Economics please contact Steven McIntosh:

email: Steven McIntosh

For more information on our work in Family and Household please contact Dr Tarja Viitanen:

email: Dr Tarja Viitanen