Drivers of youth outsiderness in European labour markets

A comment on Marques and Salavisa (2017) with a note on interpreting sufficiency in fsQCA

Authors

  • Svenja Flechtner University of Siegen
  • Torsten Heinrich Chemnitz University of Technology

Keywords:

labour market segmentation, youth outsiderness, fsQCA

Abstract

Marques and Salavisa (2017) use fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to analyze age-based labour market dualization in Southern European, Anglo-Saxon and a few Nordic countries. They argue that segmentation at the expense of young outsiders is driven by several factors in non-linear ways: deindustrialization, labour market coordination, employment protection, and liberalization can lead to youth outsiderness. We are able to replicate their analysis in technical terms, but argue that the analysis and the interpretation of its results are subject to technical misunderstandings. When correcting for these, we must call into question the study's results. To underpin our argument, we provide a hands-on discussion of how the consistency and PRI scores of the sufficiency solution terms are calculated. A good understanding of these allows the researcher to understand which cases and configurations drive the results, and thus facilitates technically correct decisions during the analysis and a better understanding of the results.

Author Biography

Torsten Heinrich, Chemnitz University of Technology

Professor of Microeconomics

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Published

2025-06-17