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What does successful university graduation signal to employers? A factorial survey experiment on sheepskin effects
[journal article]
Abstract Higher education graduates enjoy substantial labour market advantages over similar individuals who attended higher education but did not complete a degree. We use a hiring survey experiment with 335 German employers to explore possible explanations for these 'sheepskin effects', while addressing con... view more
Higher education graduates enjoy substantial labour market advantages over similar individuals who attended higher education but did not complete a degree. We use a hiring survey experiment with 335 German employers to explore possible explanations for these 'sheepskin effects', while addressing concerns about unobserved confounding in observational studies. Across 2680 hypothetical job applicants, employers were nearly 1.8 times more likely to invite graduates for an interview than otherwise identical non-completers and were also willing to pay graduates substantially higher starting salaries. Using a unique survey module on employers' perceptions, we show that the average employer perceives degree-holders to outperform non-completers in terms of occupation-specific and non-cognitive skills but not in terms of general cognitive skills. These employer perceptions predict hypothetical hiring behaviour in that those who view graduates more favourably showed a stronger preference for this group in the survey experiment. We discuss these results in relation to signalling, human capital, and credentialism explanations of sheepskin effects.... view less
Keywords
university level of education; graduation (academic); graduate; career prospect; hiring; recruitment; Federal Republic of Germany
Classification
Sociology of Education
Human Resources Management
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Page/Pages
p. 1-18
Journal
European Sociological Review (2025) Advance articles
ISSN
1468-2672
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed