Population mental health and education-labour market misfit

Thursday, June 27, 2013
C0.17 (Oudemanhuispoort)
Piet Bracke , Sociology, Ghent University
Sarah Missinne , Sociology, Ghent University
Elise Pattyn , Sociology, Ghent University
In general, educated people experience less psychological distress and a higher subjective well-being. These mental health benefits are related to both the allocation and the socialization function of education. Question is whether the mental health benefits of educational attainment are limitless?  We explore the potential diminishing mental health returns of educational attainment by estimating the impact of overeducation both at the individual and the societal level. At the individual level overeducation occurs when the acquired level of education exceeds the level of education required to perform a job. At the societal level, overeducation is a feature of a labour market with an oversupply of well-educated employees. We use the ESS data and restrict the sample to the employed population from 24 to 60 years old (N = 19,089). Depressive symptoms are measured by means of the shortened Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. We used two indicators of education and two objective measure of. Country level information on the gap between the non-tertiary and tertiary educated in terms of unemployment risks, earnings, and access to skilled jobs is used to measure the oversupply of well-educated employees. Results show diminishing mental health returns of educational attainment. In addition, a depressive mood was more prevalent among the overeducated and among the tertiary educated in countries characterized by a labour market with an oversupply of well-educated