Soft Skills, Competition, and Hiring Discrimination
This paper conducts a correspondence study to assess demand for soft skills in the context of hiring discrimination in Malaysia. No evidence of gender-based discrimination is found, including in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics occupations. However, in line with previous studies in the same context, there is evidence of ethnic discrimination. The paper then test the relevance of two soft skills: leadership and teamwork. These tests find some evidence that the labor market rewards simple signals of teamwork for the average applicant. Teamwork also plays an important role in the context of labor market discrimination, reducing the discrimination gap by 40 percent. In contrast, signaling leadership skills has no effect. Last, the paper considers the role of labor market competition. Companies facing competition in the labor market, measured by the number of competitors advertising similar positions, are 56 to 66 percent less likely to discriminate. On the supply side, discrimination increases with the relative quality of the pool of applicants. The results provide novel evidence that soft skills and labor market competition both play important roles in understanding hiring discrimination. This underlines potential pathways to overcome labor market discrimination and improve job matching.
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC: World Bank
2024-04-18
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Subjects: | DISCRIMINATION, LABOR MARKET, SOFT SKILLS, COMPETITION, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099951104172438097/IDU140fa01051b52314c131b6ad1e5378c9e0c0b https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41435 |
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Summary: | This paper conducts a correspondence
study to assess demand for soft skills in the context of
hiring discrimination in Malaysia. No evidence of
gender-based discrimination is found, including in science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics occupations.
However, in line with previous studies in the same context,
there is evidence of ethnic discrimination. The paper then
test the relevance of two soft skills: leadership and
teamwork. These tests find some evidence that the labor
market rewards simple signals of teamwork for the average
applicant. Teamwork also plays an important role in the
context of labor market discrimination, reducing the
discrimination gap by 40 percent. In contrast, signaling
leadership skills has no effect. Last, the paper considers
the role of labor market competition. Companies facing
competition in the labor market, measured by the number of
competitors advertising similar positions, are 56 to 66
percent less likely to discriminate. On the supply side,
discrimination increases with the relative quality of the
pool of applicants. The results provide novel evidence that
soft skills and labor market competition both play important
roles in understanding hiring discrimination. This
underlines potential pathways to overcome labor market
discrimination and improve job matching. |
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