Communication and language skills pay off, but not everybody needs them

The importance of communication skills is increasing on the labour market and a further strengthening of this trend is expected due to Industry 4.0. This development will have significant consequences for individuals’ employability, requirements on educational outcomes and gender equality. This arti...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of the sociology of language 2021-07, Vol.2021 (270), p.59-93
Hauptverfasser: Balcar, Jiří, Dokoupilová, Lucie
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container_end_page 93
container_issue 270
container_start_page 59
container_title International journal of the sociology of language
container_volume 2021
creator Balcar, Jiří
Dokoupilová, Lucie
description The importance of communication skills is increasing on the labour market and a further strengthening of this trend is expected due to Industry 4.0. This development will have significant consequences for individuals’ employability, requirements on educational outcomes and gender equality. This article employs data from a representative survey of Czech employees (  = 1,500) replenished with information on requirements on their communication skills (Effective communication, Czech language and English language) in order to explore (a) the distribution of communication skills requirements on the labour market, (b) personal and job characteristics related to work positions requiring highly developed communication skills, and (c) wage returns to these skills. The results show that one standard deviation increase in job requirements on communication skills is connected with 5.8% wage premium. However, not everybody needs well-developed communication skills. Only a quarter of employees needs highly developed effective communication, Czech and English languages, while there is also a quarter of employees that needs only a very basic level of communication skills. The results also revealed that females perform more communication-intensive occupations than males do. Cognitive skills and the need to excel represent other significant factors correlated with higher job requirements on communication skills.
doi_str_mv 10.1515/ijsl-2020-0021
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source Sociological Abstracts; De Gruyter journals
subjects Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive skills
Communication
Communication skills
Czech language
Employability
Employees
English language
Equality
gender
Gender inequality
Job characteristics
Job requirements
Labor market
Language proficiency
language skills
Learning outcomes
Males
Needs
occupation
Occupations
wage returns
Wages & salaries
Work skills
title Communication and language skills pay off, but not everybody needs them
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