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Job-training of Hungarian higher-education graduates

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  • Peter Galasi

    (Budapest University of Economics and Public Administration)

Abstract

Considerable amounts of time and money are spent on job-training of school-leavers graduated from higher-education institutions. More than a half of the employees in our sample participated in job-training between graduation date (1999) and September 2000. The work in this paper considers two aspects of the problem. First, the relationship between training probability/training length and the initial human capital (proxied by level of education and in-school labour market experience) is concerned with, and, second, some elements of the training-costsharing decision is analysed. There are some signs that university education reduces the probability of training as compared to college education, whereas in-school labour market experience increases it. University education reduces training length, as well. In-school labour market experience has no effect on the length of job-training. Another important result is that school-leavers holding diplomas with "narrower" types of education are more likely to obtain training, and also to have longer training programmes. This implies a more severe matching problem in the case of "narrower" types of education, possibly due to prohibitive searching costs for finding a good-quality match. Results for the cost-sharing decision are in line with Becker's idea, since the firm is less likely to entirely cover the costs of general training and more likely to finance job-specific training programmes.

Suggested Citation

  • Peter Galasi, 2003. "Job-training of Hungarian higher-education graduates," Budapest Working Papers on the Labour Market 0305, Institute of Economics, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies.
  • Handle: RePEc:has:bworkp:0305
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    File URL: http://www.econ.core.hu/doc/bwp/bwp/bwp0305.pdf
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
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