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Graduate employability and the development of competencies. The incomplete reform of the “Bologna Process”

Riccardo Leoni (Department of Management, Economics and Quantitative Methods, University of Bergamo, Bergamo, Italy)

International Journal of Manpower

ISSN: 0143-7720

Article publication date: 1 July 2014

1739

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to analyse the coherence between competency mismatches and the objective of European policymakers to transform the higher education system through the Bologna Process and the Dublin Descriptors, moving from the transfer of knowledge from the teacher to learning by the student and from disciplinary knowledge to competencies.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper is based first on the theoretical arguments that confront the European reform of the tertiary education system and the nature of competency mismatches, and second on graduate earnings function estimates using two Italian databases. The paper demonstrates the waning signalling power associated with university degrees and the disruptive assertion of the competency concept.

Findings

The theoretical arguments developed suggest that competency mismatches are not only responsible for the medium-low positioning of the competency profile with respect to a counterfactual constituted by a graduate with a good match but also tend to affect the growth path of the competencies themselves: the bigger the initial gap, the smaller the steps in their growth. The econometric estimates carried out document that the level of expressed competencies drives graduate remuneration.

Originality/value

By disentangling educational outcomes (i.e. disciplinary knowledge) from requested competencies, the study demonstrates that firms remunerate competencies and to a far lesser extent disciplinary knowledge per se, and that cultural background tends to assume greater importance than formal education in forging transversal competencies. The Bologna Process could overturn this situation, provided it is integrated with a constructivist pedagogical approach, a tool that is lacking today but is vital in providing education processes that enable students to acquire and develop the competencies required by modern production techniques.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

JEL Classifications — I21, J24, M51, J31

This paper is based on a previous version presented at the DEHEMS Conference (Vienna, 22-23 September 2011). The author thanks all participants of the session, two anonymous referees and Samo Pavlin for their suggestions, remarks and critiques that this paper has benefited from. Financial support by the University of Bergamo is gratefully acknowledged.

Citation

Leoni, R. (2014), "Graduate employability and the development of competencies. The incomplete reform of the “Bologna Process”", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 35 No. 4, pp. 448-469. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-05-2013-0097

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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