This site is a work in progress and has not been widely shared. Content may contain errors. Feedback is welcome.
This site is undergoing review. Some annotations were human-generated, some AI-generated — all are being verified.
Back to papers

Skill Demand versus Skill Use

Daly, Groes, Jensen

20244 citations
Abstract

Skill requirements in a job post reflect an employer’s “wish list,” but do they also reflect skills used on the job by the hired worker? We compare skill measures derived from the text of online job posts with individual-level data from the Danish Labour Force Survey (LFS) in which participants report their main skills used on the job as free text. By identifying individual workers from the LFS who can be matched to a job post, we validate that the extensive margin skills measures derived from job postings data reflect main skills used on the job. Thus, using job postings data to analyze skill use on the job is generally a valid empirical strategy. However, we also show that heterogeneity in returns to skills is missed if only the extensive margin of skill demand is considered.

Primary Datasets

Danish job postings

Secondary Datasets

Labour Force Survey

Key Methods
Posting-survey match
Sample Period
2018-2023
Geographic Coverage
Denmark
Occupation Classification
ISCO-08
Industry Classification
NACE
Replication Package
Expected
Notes
Validates posting data; New paper (no citation count yet); Non-US paper; included for cross-national comparison