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Featured researches published by Noël Muller.


World Bank Publications | 2016

Minds and behaviors at work : boosting socioemotional skills for Latin America’s workforce

Wendy Cunningham; Pablo Acosta; Noël Muller

Although the Latin American region has shown an impressive growth in educational attainment over the past two decades, that education has failed to yield expected benefits. A mounting body of research and policy debates argues that the quantity of education is not an adequate metric of human capital acquisition. Rather, individual skills what they actually know and can do should stand as policy targets and be fostered across the life course. Evidence from around the world shows that both cognitive and socio-emotional skills are demanded by employers and favorably affect a range of outcomes, including educational attainment and employment outcomes. Through original empirical research investigating the role of cognitive and socio-emotional skills in shaping adults labor market outcomes in Bolivia, Colombia, El Salvador, and Peru, supplemented by similar studies in other Latin American countries, this review confirms that cognitive skills matter for reaping labor market gains in terms of higher wages and formal jobs in Latin America; but so do socio-emotional skills. Moreover, socio-emotional skills seem to particularly influence labor force participation and tertiary education attendance as a platform to build knowledge. The study also presents a policy framework for skills development by: (i) providing insights by developmental psychologists about when people are neuro-biologically, socio-emotionally, and situationally ready to develop socio-emotional skills, and (ii) suggesting new directions in cognitive development.


World Bank Publications | 2017

Skills for a Modern Ukraine

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir

Ukraine’s economic progress has been uneven since the start of the transition in 1991. Productivity is low partly because of the slow pace of market-oriented reforms and the misallocation of the labor force. One the key factors limiting productivity gains is the inadequacy of workforce skills, the focus of this report. This study aims to provide policy makers in Ukraine with new evidence to influence the design and implementation of public policies on postsecondary education, labor market information and intermediation, and labor policies. To do so, it investigates the nature of skills valued in Ukraine’s labor market, identifies labor shortages, assesses constraints to firms’ operations, discusses how institutions affect investment in skills, and suggests policy options. The report provides granular evidence from original data from household and firm skills surveys, a data set of online job vacancies, and an assessment of workforce development institutions.


The IZA World of Labor | 2018

The role of cognitive and socio-emotional skills in labor markets

Pablo Acosta; Noël Muller

Common proxies, such as years of education, have been shown to be ineffective at capturing cross-country differences in skills acquisition, as well as the role they play in the labor market. A large body of research shows that direct measures of skills, in particular cognitive and socio-emotional ones, provide more adequate estimations of individuals’ differences in potential productive capacity than the quantity of education they receive. Evidence shows that cognitive skills in particular are quite relevant to explain wages, while socio-emotional skills are more associated with labor force and education participation decisions.


Archive | 2015

Beyond Qualifications: Returns to Cognitive and Socio-Emotional Skills in Colombia

Pablo Acosta; Noël Muller; Miguel Sarzosa

This paper examines the relationship between individuals’ skills and labor market outcomes for the working-age population of Colombia’s urban areas. Using a 2012 unique household survey, the paper finds that cognitive skills (aptitudes to perform mental tasks such as comprehension or reasoning) and socio-emotional skills (personality traits and behaviors) matter for favorable labor market outcomes in the Colombian context, although they have distinct roles. Cognitive skills are greatly associated with higher earnings and holding a formal job or a high-qualified occupation. By contrast, socio-emotional skills appear to have little direct influence on these outcomes, but play a stronger role in labor market participation. Both types of skills, especially cognitive skills, are largely associated with pursuing tertiary education. The analysis applies standard econometric techniques as a benchmark and structural estimations to correct for the measurement error of skill constructs.


Archive | 2017

Identifying Core Skills for the Labor Market and Policy Recommendations

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir


Archive | 2017

Employer Demand for Skills and Labor

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir


Archive | 2017

Institutional Issues Holding Back the Creation of Jobs and Development of Skills

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir


Archive | 2017

Workforce Skills and Their Role in the Labor Market

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir


Archive | 2017

Back Matter: Appendices A through E

Ximena Del Carpio; Olga Kupets; Noël Muller; Anna Olefir


Archive | 2016

Cognitive and Socioemotional Skills Profile of the Latin American Workforce

Wendy Cunningham; Pablo Acosta; Noël Muller

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