Transitioning from the University to theWorkplace: A Duration Model with Grouped Data
Metadata
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Salas Velasco, ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
higher education Han–Hausman ordered logit model survival analysis
Date
2024-07-16Referencia bibliográfica
Salas Velasco, M. Stats 2024, 7(3), 719-731; [https://doi.org/10.3390/stats7030043]
Abstract
Labor market surveys usually measure unemployment duration in time intervals. In
these cases, traditional duration models such as Cox regression and parametric survival models are
not suitable for studying the duration of unemployment spells. In order to deal with this above
issue, we use Han and Hausman’s ordered logit model for grouped durations, which has more
flexibility than standard specifications. In particular, its flexibility arises from the fact that we do not
need to specify any functional form for the baseline hazard function—it also circumvents problems
associated with heterogeneity. The focus of interest is on the first unemployment duration of higher
education graduates. The analysis is accomplished by using a large dataset from a graduate survey
of Spanish university graduates. The results show that the university-to-work transition of higher
education graduates is significantly associated with the graduate’s age, participation in internship
programs, field of study, type of university, and gender. Specifically, graduates who participated in
internship programs, engineering graduates, and graduates from private universities experience a
smooth transition.