Sources of Training and Their Impact on Wages
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in ILR Review
- Vol. 48 (4) , 812-826
- https://doi.org/10.1177/001979399504800413
Abstract
Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth from 1986 to 1990, the author investigates the wage impact of various sources of training—among them, company training programs, apprenticeships, business schools, vocational and technical institutes, correspondence courses, and seminars outside the workplace. Time spent in training (of whatever kind) apparently did not affect 1990 wage levels. The incidence of two kinds of training, however—company training and seminars outside work—was positively related to wage levels as well as to wage change between 1986 and 1990; that is, workers who undertook such training enjoyed higher wages than those who did not. Time spent in vocational schools was also positively associated with wage change, though not with 1990 wage levels. The other forms of training had no apparent impact on either wage levels or wage change.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Worker Characteristics, Job Characteristics, and the Receipt of On-the-Job TrainingILR Review, 1991
- Job Matching and On-the-Job TrainingJournal of Labor Economics, 1989
- The Impact of CETA Programs on Earnings: A Review of the LiteratureThe Journal of Human Resources, 1987
- HETEROGENEOUS FIRMS AND THE ORGANIZATION OF PRODUCTIONEconomic Inquiry, 1983
- Generalized Econometric Models with SelectivityEconometrica, 1983
- On-The-Job Training and Earnings Differences by Race and SexThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1979
- Job Matching and the Theory of TurnoverJournal of Political Economy, 1979
- Sample Selection Bias as a Specification ErrorEconometrica, 1979
- Self-Selection and Turnover in the Labor MarketThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1976