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Table 2 Chances of being employed—entire sample

From: Unemployment among younger and older individuals: does conventional data about unemployment tell us the whole story?

Variable

Model 1

Model 2

Coefficient (std. error)

Coefficient (std. error)

C

− 0.773*** (0.060)

− 0.833*** (0.054)

Gender

− 0.228*** (0.073)

− 0.230*** (0.071)

Ages 18–24

0.237*** (0.073)

0.157** (0.068)

Ages 45–54

− 0.201* (0.107)

− 0.210** (0.101)

Ages 55–59

− 1.051*** (0.132)

− 0.948*** (0.140)

Educated

0.554*** (0.067)

 

Vocational education

 

0.329*** (0.073)

Academic education

 

0.852*** (0.079)

Children

− 0.184*** (0.041)

− 0.164*** (0.041)

Ethnicity

0.146*** (0.042)

0.166*** (0.042)

Gender × ages 18–24

0.374*** (0.095)

0.305*** (0.093)

Gender × ages 25–29

0.419*** (0.099)

0.285*** (0.089)

Gender × ages 45–54

− 0.284** (0.136)

− 0.296** (0.134)

Gender × ages 55–59

− 0.575*** (0.185)

− 0.561*** (0.184)

Educated × ages 18–24

− 1.031*** (0.094)

 

Educated × ages 25–29

− 0.469*** (0.098)

 

Educated × ages 45–54

− 0.361*** (0.134)

 

Vocational education × ages 18–24

 

− 0.274* (0.151)

Academic education × ages 18–24

 

− 0.535*** (0.202)

Academic education × ages 25–29

 

− 0.236* (0.129)

Academic education × ages 45–54

 

− 0.473*** (0.161)

Academic education × ages 55–59

 

− 0.358* (0.204)

  1. Dependent variable: being employed
  2. Included observations: 13,495
  3. p < 0.1, ** p < 0.05, *** p < 0.01