Given the importance of job placement for Ph.D.s, it is surprising that economists
have not closely examined the factors that affect procuring job interviews
for new Ph.D. economists.' In this study, I investigated those factors
using a data set gathered at the 1997 American Economic Association (AEA)
meetings in New Orleans. My purpose was to increase the information available
to Ph.D. candidates who wish to maximize their postgraduation job prospects.
In addition, this study may guide undergraduates and master's candidates who
seek to pursue a Ph.D. in economics. The results of the findings, however, could
benefit more than job seekers-they may provide academic departments and
private industry with a comparative baseline for making decisions to interview
job candidates.
The job market for new Ph.D.s consists of two submarkets-academic and
businesshndustry. The following are questions regarding job seekers in both submarkets.
(1) Do employers in academia seek the same attributes as businesshndustry?
(2) Is there discrimination in the interview decision? (3) Is an MBA
important in the Ph.D. market? (4) How many more interviews are secured by
candidates with a finished dissertation? (5) How important are teaching and research
credentials? (6) Are graduates from top-ranked programs given special
consideration in the job market? (7) Do personal letters of recommendation or
calls from professors make a difference in the interview decision? (8) How influential are recommendation letters from prestigious economists? (9) What is the
marginal effect of submitting another application?
A simple theoretic construct provides a basis for understanding the two-step
job-search process carried out by new Ph.D. economists.* In the first step, the job
seeker decides whether to enter one or both submarkets and determines the optimal
number of applications to submit. The second step reflects the actual decision
process regarding acceptance or rejection of a job offer. Because a natural
prerequisite to securing a job is an initial interview, my main focus in this study
was to discover the optimal job search strategies for new Ph.D. economists by
determining applicant characteristics that are conducive to obtaining interviews.