Bussi Davide, Piazzoni Carlotta, Pancheva Marta G, Lucchini Mario
Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
Department of Social and Political Sciences, Economics and Management, Sophia University Institute, Figline and Incisa Valdarno, Italy.
Front Sociol. 2025 Jun 25;10:1585459. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2025.1585459. eCollection 2025.
Access to the labor market is influenced by various socio-economic factors, including social class and education. In Italy, these elements play a crucial role in determining employment opportunities and career trajectories. This study aims to analyze how social origin influences transition to the first job across different birth cohorts, gender groups, and macro-region of residence while also assessing the mediating role of education.
Using Event History Analysis, we estimate labor market entry timing via survival models and discrete-time logistic regression, accounting for social background effects. We classify social origin using the European Socio-economic Classification scale based on the parental occupation. The analysis, conducted separately by gender, controls for birth cohort, education, parenthood, and area of residence. Also, we employ the KHB decomposition, which enables us to quantify the extent to which education mediates the influence of social background on labor market entry.
Individuals from lower social backgrounds enter the labor market earlier, while those from higher-status families tend to delay entry, likely due to extended education and greater financial support. Educational attainment mediates the relationship between social origin and labor market entry, as individuals from higher-status backgrounds tend to delay entry due to prolonged education. However, education does not fully eliminate class-based disparities-controlling for educational attainment amplifies rather than erases the effect of social origin, indicating that other mechanisms still play a role. Social class disparities in labor market entry remain largely stable across cohorts, with only minimal convergence among men and no significant change among women. For men, class effects remain stable across macro-regions, while for women they are stronger in northern Italy.
Our findings confirm that social origin remains a significant determinant of labor market entry in Italy, despite changes in education and labor market structures over time. While increased access to education has contributed to greater opportunities, it has not entirely eliminated class-based disparities in employment transitions.
进入劳动力市场受到多种社会经济因素的影响,包括社会阶层和教育程度。在意大利,这些因素在决定就业机会和职业轨迹方面起着至关重要的作用。本研究旨在分析社会出身如何影响不同出生队列、性别群体以及居住宏观区域向第一份工作的转变,同时评估教育的中介作用。
我们使用事件史分析,通过生存模型和离散时间逻辑回归来估计劳动力市场进入时间,并考虑社会背景效应。我们根据父母职业使用欧洲社会经济分类量表对社会出身进行分类。按性别分别进行的分析控制了出生队列、教育程度、生育状况和居住地区。此外,我们采用KHB分解法,这使我们能够量化教育在多大程度上中介了社会背景对劳动力市场进入的影响。
社会背景较低的个体更早进入劳动力市场,而来自较高社会地位家庭的个体往往会延迟进入,这可能是由于接受教育时间延长和获得更多经济支持。教育程度中介了社会出身与劳动力市场进入之间的关系,因为来自较高社会地位背景的个体由于接受教育时间延长而倾向于延迟进入。然而,教育并没有完全消除基于阶层的差异——控制教育程度会放大而不是消除社会出身的影响,这表明其他机制仍然发挥着作用。劳动力市场进入方面的社会阶层差异在各队列中基本保持稳定,男性之间只有极小的趋同,女性则没有显著变化。对于男性,阶层效应在各宏观区域保持稳定,而对于女性,在意大利北部更为明显。
我们的研究结果证实,尽管随着时间的推移教育和劳动力市场结构发生了变化,但社会出身仍然是意大利劳动力市场进入的一个重要决定因素。虽然受教育机会的增加带来了更多机会,但它并没有完全消除就业转型中基于阶层的差异。