Returns to apprenticeship: Analysis based on the 2006 census

Title{Returns to apprenticeship: Analysis based on the 2006 census}
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsGunderson, M., & Krashinsky, H.
JournalCLSRN Working Paper Series
Abstract

The paper exploits the newly available Census data on the earnings of individuals in the apprenticeable trades to examine the returns to apprenticeship training. Only a small minority of males work in these trades, concentrated in the construction, production and mechanical trades where their weekly earnings premia over completed high school range from 9 to 14 percent. An even smaller minority of women report working in apprenticeable trades and it appears that many of them mistakenly report having apprenticed. In the largest single trade for women, personal services and culinary arts, the earnings premium is actually negative, although weekly earnings compare more favourably against the earnings of women without completed high school. Given reasonably large returns for men, late entry into apprenticeships is a puzzling phenomenon requiring further investigation.

Contract Number

1691

Document URL

http://www.clsrn.econ.ubc.ca/workingpapers/CLSRN%20Working%20Paper%20no....

DatasetCensus (Canadian Population Census)
Network Reference TypeWorking Paper
Research Data Centre (RDC)Toronto RDC