Do young people not in education, employment or training (NEET) experience long term occupational scarring? A longitudinal analysis over 20 years of follow up
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Ralston, K., Feng, Z., Everington, D. & Dibben, C. (2016) British Society of Population Studies (BSPS), Univ of Winchester, UK, 12 - 14 September 2016 [SLS]
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Poster presentation
Abstract:
NEET is a contested concept. However, it is consistently used by policy makers and shown in research to be associated with negative outcomes. In this paper we use the Scottish Longitudinal Study (SLS) to examine whether NEET status is associated with subsequent occupational scarring. The SLS provides a 5.3% sample of Scotland, based on the censuses of 1991, 2001 and 2011. We model occupational position, using CAMSIS, controlling for the influence of sex, limiting long term illness, educational attainment and geographical deprivation. We find the NEET categorization to be a marker of a subsequent negative outcome at the aggregate level. This appears to be redolent of a Matthew effect, whereby disadvantage accumulates to the already disadvantaged. Our results also show that negative NEET effects are variable when stratifying by educational attainment and are different for men and women. These findings confirm that there are negative effects on occupational position associated with prior NEET status but that outcomes are heterogeneous depending on levels of education and gender.
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