Claire Bonnard
University of Burgundy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Claire Bonnard.
Applied Economics Letters | 2014
Claire Bonnard; Jean-François Giret; Marielle Lambert-Le Mener
This article aims to study the earnings expectations of first-year students at a French university. Our findings highlight the importance of the environment in which students make their choices about education. Expected earnings are proportionally higher when their parents seem to be involved in the careers guidance, taking into account the effect of parental socio-economic status. The positive opinion of parents about the orientation or the connection between the discipline and the father’s occupation are generally associated with higher earnings. In addition, our results show a strong impact of cognitive variables which are far more significant than variables relating to past educational performances.
Labour | 2012
Claire Bonnard
We address the question concerning the choice of graduates in sciences and engineering to look for employment in research and development. We use an endogenous switching regression to avoid the existence of self-selection biases. The study shows that human capital is decisive where both employment opportunities and remuneration are concerned within, but not without, this sector. The results also suggest that in the early stages of a career, the R&D sector is less rewarding than other types of employment only for doctors and not for graduates from engineering schools.
European Journal of Engineering Education | 2009
Claire Bonnard; Jean Bourdon; Jean-Jacques Paul
In the early 1990s, several studies pointed out a significant gap in earnings between engineers in private firms working in Research and Development (R&D) and those in other activities. The purpose of this article is to assess, from conventional Mincerian models, to what extent these findings are still valid. The different levels of responsibility and job satisfaction of engineers in both types of activities are also analysed. The results clearly suggest a lower remuneration for engineers working in R&D in comparison to other activities, all things being equal. On the other hand, engineers involved in R&D activities have a greater dissatisfaction about the remuneration they receive, but also concerning many aspects of their work. These results lead to questions about the place of R&D within companies, in a knowledge-based economy.
European journal of higher education | 2017
Claire Bonnard; Julien Calmand; Jean-François Giret
ABSTRACT This research investigates the determinants of international mobility of Ph.D.s upon graduation. It is based on a survey of 400 young Ph.D.s who graduated in France between 2003 and 2008, half of whom were still abroad more than six years after graduating. The impacts of personal, occupational and scientific characteristics on the successive mobility decisions after graduating were scrutinized. The findings show that motivations for going abroad relate principally to the difficulty in finding employment on the French labour market. The choices as to longer term expatriation are more fragmented and can be less readily unravelled. By contrast, readiness to return to France is often accounted for by family factors.
Gender and Education | 2016
Claire Bonnard; Jean-François Giret
ABSTRACT Gender differences in wage expectations may affect investment in human capital and increase inequalities in the labour market. Our research based on a survey of first-year students at a French university aims to focus on expectations at the beginning of the career. Our results show that anticipated earnings differ significantly between men and women. One year after graduation, we find a gender gap in pay of 16%. A wage decomposition method indicates that most of this effect is due to anticipation of discrimination. Ten years after graduation, anticipated discrimination is still almost as dominant in explaining the gender gap in pay. Finally, using a survey of recent college graduates, we show that growth in the anticipated gender gap differs greatly from growth in the observed gender gap. Our findings highlight the importance of policies promoting higher educational aspirations for young women. Career guidance counselling for students may play a decisive role in contributing to give women more ambitious aspirations, which may in turn serve to reduce inequalities in the labour market.
Les incitations à l'innovation dans le secteur privé | 2012
Claire Bonnard
Revue D Economie Politique | 2010
Denis Meuret; Claire Bonnard
XXVII Jornadas de la Asociación de Economía de la Educación | 2018
Bastien Bernela; Liliane Bonnal; Claire Bonnard; Julien Calmand; Jean-François Giret
VIII European Congress of Methodology | 2018
Claire Bonnard; Jean-François Giret; Yann Kossi
Archive | 2018
Jean-François Giret; Bastien Bernela; Claire Bonnard; Julien Calmand; Liliane Bonnal