High education and public sector employment: Evidence from Finland using data on twins

Working Papers 296 Terhi Maczulskij

Abstract

Using twin data from Finland, this paper examines the causal effect of labor quality measured by education on the choice to work in the public sector. A distinction to previous studies is made by allowing controls of family background and genetics effects that could drive the positive relationship between higher education and public sector employment. The conditional (fixed effects) logit regression estimates indicate that highly qualified employees are more likely to seek public sector employment. The paper also utilizes the longitudinal structure of the data to examine whether the results vary over time. These results indicate that the association between public sector work and higher education is counter-cyclical. In other words, highly qualified workers are more likely to hold their public service positions and to have greater access to public sector jobs during economic downturns.