Job Satisfaction of Spanish University Graduates

Publication date

2014-09-17T12:07:25Z

2014-09-17T12:07:25Z

2013-04-30

2014-09-17T12:07:25Z

Abstract

This paper investigates the determinants of job satisfaction of university graduates in Spain. We base our analysis on Locke"s discrepancy theory [Locke (1969)] and decompose subjective evaluation of job characteristics into surplus and deficit levels. We also study the importance of overeducation and over-skilling on job satisfaction. We use REFLEX data, a survey of university graduates. We conclude that job satisfaction is mostly determined by the subjective evaluation of intrinsic job characteristics, with an asymmetric impact of surpluses and deficits. Over-skilling is much more important than over-education in explaining the job satisfaction of university graduates, although the latter is also significant.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Universidad de Zaragoza

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Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=96925716002

Revista de Economia Aplicada, 2013, vol. XXI, num. 61, p. 29-55

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Rights

(c) Kucel, Aleksander et al., 2013

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