@inbook{43bcb7db97c548528bcdc4cc8e792d44,
title = "Do chinese employers avoid hiring overqualified workers? evidence from an internet job board",
abstract = "Can having more education than a job requires reduce one's chances of being offered the job? We study this question in a sample of applications to jobs that are posted on an urban Chinese website. We find that being overqualified in this way does not reduce the success rates of universityeducated jobseekers applying to college-level jobs, but that it does hurt college-educated workers' chances when applying to jobs requiring technical school, which involves three fewer years of education than college. Our results highlight a difficult situation faced by the recent large cohort of college-educated Chinese workers: They seem to fare poorly in the competition for jobs, both when pitted against more-educated university graduates and less-educated technical school graduates.",
keywords = "China, Internet job board, Job search and match, Labor demand, Overqualification",
author = "Kailing Shen and Peter Kuhn",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1108/S0147-9121(2013)0000037005",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781781907566",
series = "Research in Labor Economics",
pages = "1--30",
editor = "Corrado Giulietti and Konstantinos Tatsiramos and Zimmermann Klaus",
booktitle = "Labor Market Issues in China",
}