• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Unemployment in early career in the UK: a trap or a stepping stone?
  • Contributor: Schmelzer, Paul [Author]
  • imprint: 2011
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0001699311412626
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Berufseinmündung ; Arbeitnehmer ; Arbeitslosigkeit ; Bildungsabschluss ; Berufsverlauf ; hoch Qualifizierter ; niedrig Qualifizierter ; Arbeitsuche ; Karriere ; Beruf ; soziale Position ; berufliche Reintegration ; beruflicher Aufstieg ; beruflicher Abstieg ; Großbritannien ; event history analysis ; growth curve models ; pull vs. push mechanism ; scar effect of unemployment ; beruflicher Status ; Arbeitsmarktrisiko
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Veröffentlichungsversion
    begutachtet (peer reviewed)
    In: Acta Sociologica ; 54 (2011) 3 ; 251-265
  • Description: In this article, I analyse the consequences of unemployment on the re-entry occupational status and subsequent occupational status growth of different educational groups in the first years of employment in the UK. I argue that phases of unemployment mean different things for different educational groups. The sequential nature of job offers causes job searchers either to accept a job offer immediately or to wait for the next offer. Higher aspirations and higher levels of savings mean that high-educated people are more likely to wait until they are offered a job that improves their occupational position. In the case of low-educated workers, however, waiting for a better job offer might not be the best strategy, because they might never get one; in addition, the low level of unemployment benefits from previous salaries, the regime of sanctions linked to the right to receive unemployment benefits and low household incomes push them into employment. I use growth curve models and parameterize in one model both the pre-unemployment and the post-unemployment phases. Based on British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) data, the results confirm my argumentation: high-educated people gain status while low-educated entrants lose status upon re-entering the labour market after unemployment.
  • Access State: Open Access
  • Rights information: