When Do They Settle Down?
Young People in
the U.S. Labor Market
What happens when young people leave high school and enter
the labor force? There is a widely held perception that
American high school graduates "mill about," holding many
jobs and not settling into stable employment until their
mid-to-late twenties. This early-career instability raises
policy concerns about lost training and productivity:
Supposedly, leaving a job courts risk of unemployment, job
leavers lose the firm-specific skills they have developed,
and high turnover discourages firms from training young
people. Despite the certainty implied by a proliferation of
school-to-work programs, this perception is not based on
empirical evidence, and research results are contradictory.
Jacob Klerman and Lynn Karoly recently completed a study
on this subject, using a different measure than others have
used. According to their report, The Transition to Stable
Employment: The Experience of U.S. Youth in Their Early
Labor Market Career, "At least among high school
graduates and those who enter the labor market with
additional postsecondary schooling, there is evidence of
stable employment early in the labor market career."
Although their results validate the perception that young
people hold many jobs, they also show that most high school
graduates have a job that will last a year or more before
they turn 20. Consequently, some current school-to-work
programs are addressing a problem that doesn't exist for
most male high school graduates. However, Klerman and
Karoly found that the problem is very real for high school
dropouts and minorities.
Trying out and settling down in
the labor market
The study used data from the National
Longitudinal Survey-Youth (NLS-Y) to reexamine the
school-to-work transition among young U.S. men and women who
entered the labor market in the early 1980s. Some of the
findings for static measures could be seen as evidence
of instability among young male workers: - Until they
turn 22, at least 20 percent of high school graduates are
neither working full time nor in school in a given week. The
percentage of high school dropouts stays that high until they
turn 26.
- By 24, the typical high school graduate (that
is, the person at the median of the job distribution) has had
about five jobs; the typical high school dropout has had
almost six.
The problem with drawing conclusions from
these measures is that they are static, whereas the
school-to-work transition is, by definition, dynamic.
To capture the dynamics of employment, the study used a
different measure: what percentage of high school dropouts,
high school graduates, people with some college, and
four-year college graduates have ever held a stable job (a
job lasting at least one, two, or three years) at different
ages and years since leaving school. Klerman and Karoly
argue that this measure provides better evidence of stability
than tenure in a current job: How long a job has lasted at a
given point is not how long it may ultimately last. Further,
changing jobs or taking "stop-gap" jobs may be part of a
career path leading to long-term stable employment. Changing
jobs may be good if the new job provides a better match
between the employer's skill requirements and the youth's
interests and skills. Moreover, people usually change jobs to
get higher income. They may take stop-gap jobs while waiting
for the one that provides a better match or more pay.
Using this measure, the analysis challenges the perception
that the typical high school graduate does not settle
into a long-term job until his mid-twenties: "For the NLS-Y
cohort, the median male high school graduate entered a job
that would last . . . more than a year shortly after his 19th
birthday, a job that would last more than two years shortly
after his 20th birthday, and a job that would last longer
than three years while he was 22. If we exclude those who
return to school--taking themselves out of the transition
from school to work--the entrance into stable employment
occurs even earlier, at ages 19, 20, and 21 for one-, two-,
and three-year jobs, respectively."
A harder time for
some groups
Again, these figures are for the median
graduate, which means that half of the graduates begin stable
jobs sooner and half later. There is also considerable
difference across the education groups defined above. As the
figure shows, five years after leaving school only 21 percent
of the high school dropouts (HSDO) had ever held a job that
lasted three years, whereas 55 percent of college graduates
(CG) had done so; high school graduates (HSG) and those with
some college (SC) fall between the two extremes.

Employment Stability Increases with Years of Education
Clearly,
high school dropouts have the worst experiences. The picture
is about equally bad for minorities. The study found few
ethnic differences in the transition within the education
groups. However, more blacks tend to be among those who take
longer, despite the fact that they hold fewer jobs than
whites and Hispanics do in their early careers. One might
infer that blacks have fewer jobs because they stay longer in
a job. Unfortunately, it is probably because, at any given
time, black men are more likely to be neither working nor in
school. Similar patterns hold for women. Only female
college graduates move into stable employment as quickly as
their male counterparts. For the other education groups,
women's decisions to drop out of the labor force for
childbearing or childrearing may explain some of the
transitional differences.
The picture for high school
dropouts became even grimmer when Klerman and Karoly
considered trends for young people entering the labor market
after the early 1980s. They found that the trends were
relatively stable for young men with at least a high school
diploma. In contrast, dropouts have become even less likely
to be working full time and more likely to be neither working
nor in school, and more of them are taking longer to get
stable jobs.
Implications for policy
The study's
results bring into question some assumptions underlying
particular school-to-work initiatives, especially the belief
that the typical high school graduate spends a lot of
unproductive time before settling into a career-type job in
his mid-to-late twenties. That assumption has led some
initiatives to focus on linking graduates with employers and
other means of encouraging job tenure. This focus is quite
appropriate for minorities and high school dropouts, the
subpopulations that have problems settling into stable
employment. However, for the typical student, the
initiatives should emphasize--as many programs do--improving
skills for the workplace. The greatest challenge for
school-based programs is reaching potential dropouts early
enough to keep them in school and help them avoid a prolonged
period of milling about.
RAND policy briefs
summarize research that has been more fully documented
elsewhere. This policy brief describes work done for RAND's
Institute on Education and Training and the National Center
for Research on Vocational Education, University of
California, Berkeley; it is documented in The Transition
to Stable Employment: The Experience of U.S. Youth in Their
Early Labor Market Career, by Jacob Alex Klerman and Lynn
A. Karoly, MR-564-NCRVE/UCB/LE,
1995, and is available from National Book Network,
Telephone: 800-462-6420; FAX: 301-459-2118. Abstracts of all RAND documents
may be viewed on the World Wide Web at /
Publications are distributed to the trade by National Book
Network. RAND is a nonprofit institution that helps improve
public policy through research and analysis; its publications
do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of its
research sponsors.
RB-8012
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