Using Your Ties to Get a Worse Job? The Differential Effects of Social Networks on Quality of Employment in Colombia

MPRA Paper No. 85714

30 Pages Posted: 21 Apr 2017 Last revised: 18 Apr 2018

See all articles by Thibaud Deguilhem

Thibaud Deguilhem

LADYSS UMR 7533 - Université Paris Cité

Jean-Philippe Berrou

CNRS, LAM / Sciences Po Bordeaux

Francois Combarnous

University of Bordeaux

Date Written: April 05, 2018

Abstract

This article examines the effect of social networks by investigating how mobilizing family, friendship or kindship ties in job searches affects the quality of employment (QoE) using a mixed approach. Drawing from socioeconomic literature on the segmented labor market, the authors propose an original and multidimensional measure of job quality and a fruitful estimation of the effect of social networks on QoE that allows for dealing with complex inter-groups heterogeneity. Using the Great Integrated Household Survey (GIHS) and a sample on Bogota's workers in 2013, they provide empirical support that the use of ties is negatively correlated with the QoE for those who are vulnerable. Likewise, the use of social relations is not significant for protected workers. Complemented by focus groups interviews, these results raise questions about the difference prevailing in relational practices between necessity networks for precarious workers and opportunity networks for protected workers in the Colombian capital.

Keywords: Social networks, Quality of employment, Finite Mixture Regression Model, Mixed method, Colombia

JEL Classification: C14, J42, L14, O54, Z13

Suggested Citation

Deguilhem, Thibaud and Berrou, Jean-Philippe and Combarnous, Francois, Using Your Ties to Get a Worse Job? The Differential Effects of Social Networks on Quality of Employment in Colombia (April 05, 2018). MPRA Paper No. 85714, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2955379 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2955379

Thibaud Deguilhem (Contact Author)

LADYSS UMR 7533 - Université Paris Cité ( email )

85 boulevard Saint-Germain
Paris, 75006
France

Jean-Philippe Berrou

CNRS, LAM / Sciences Po Bordeaux ( email )

France

Francois Combarnous

University of Bordeaux ( email )

Avenue Léon Duguit
Bordeaux, 33000
France

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