Biased beliefs about future labor-market earnings are commonplace. Based on a longitudinal survey of graduate work transitions in Mozambique, this study assesses the contribution of employment mismatches to a large positive gap between expected (ex ante) and realized (ex post) earnings. Accounting for the simultaneous determination of pecuniary and non-pecuniary work characteristics, employment mismatches are found to be material and associated with large earnings penalties. A decomposition of these expectational errors shows that around two-thirds are attributable to employment mismatches, suggesting job seekers systematically overestimate the ease of securing “good jobs.”
CITATION STYLE
Jones, S., Santos, R., & Xirinda, G. (2024). Employment Mismatches Drive Expectational Earnings Errors among Mozambican Graduates. World Bank Economic Review, 38(1), 51–73. https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhad018
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