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https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-020-00579-2

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Does the effect of studying abroad on labour income vary by graduates' social origin? Evidence from Germany

[journal article]

Netz, Nicolai
Grüttner, Michael

Abstract

Studying abroad can positively influence students’ personality development, transversal skills, and labour market outcomes. At the same time, students from a high social origin are more likely to study abroad than students from a low social origin. Against this background, recent research has sugges... view more

Studying abroad can positively influence students’ personality development, transversal skills, and labour market outcomes. At the same time, students from a high social origin are more likely to study abroad than students from a low social origin. Against this background, recent research has suggested that international student mobility (ISM) may foster the reproduction of social inequality. However, this assumption has hardly been tested empirically. Drawing on social stratification theory, we first demonstrate that a scenario in which ISM increases social inequality (cumulative advantage) is as plausible as a scenario in which it decreases social inequality (compensatory levelling). We then address the sketched research gap by testing whether the effect of studying abroad on graduates' labour income varies across social groups in the German labour market. Using data from the 2005 DZHW Graduate Panel, we perform a propensity score matching and calculate random effects growth curve models to examine the role of ISM for the development of social inequality during the first 10 years of graduates' careers. In line with the scenario of cumulative advantage, our results suggest that graduates from a high social origin benefit more from ISM than graduates from a low social origin. Considering that students from a high social origin are also more likely to study abroad in the first place, we conclude that ISM tends to foster the reproduction of social inequality in the German labour market.... view less

Keywords
Federal Republic of Germany; studies (academic); foreign countries; social inequality; social background; career; difference in income

Classification
University Education
Labor Market Research

Free Keywords
Effect heterogeneity; DZHW Graduate Panel 2005

Document language
English

Publication Year
2021

Page/Pages
p. 1195-1217

Journal
Higher education : the international journal of higher education research, 82 (2021) 6

Issue topic
Heterogeneous effects of studying abroad

ISSN
1573-174X

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.