22 occupational integration of university graduates (Master's, DUT, LP)
Around 9 out of 10 students who graduated with Master's degrees, vocational Bachelor's degrees (LP) and University technology diplomas (DUT) in 2013 were in employment in December 2014, some 30 months after leaving university. After 18 months, the integration process was already well advanced. Over 85% of LMD Master's graduates were in employment. However, the employment conditions differ according to the subject studied.
Among university graduates in 2013 who entered the workforce, the employment rate eighteen months after leaving university reached 81% for DUT qualifications, 85% for those in a disciplinary Master’s programme and 88% for vocational Bachelor degree graduates (chart 22.01a).
The employment rate at thirty months after graduating was slightly higher than the previous year for the disciplinary Master's, teaching Master’s (+1 point) and DUT (+2 points) graduates. It remained stable for the vocational Bachelor degree graduates (92%).
A large majority of graduates are in stable employment 2 thirty months after leaving university, with significant differences depending on the qualification: 78% for vocational Bachelor degree graduates, 73% for Master's graduates and 69% for DUT graduates (chart 22.02a).
For all qualifications, the jobs occupied are very largely full time (over 90%). The jobs obtained are of a good level: 85% managers or intermediate professions for Master's graduates, 71% for vocational Bachelor's degree graduates and 57% for DUT graduates (chart 22.02a).
The median net monthly salary of graduates in full-time employment increased from 5% to 7% between eighteen and thirty months after graduation (table 22.03). At thirty months, it reached €1,900 for Master's graduates. Salaries are much lower for vocational Bachelor degree graduates (€1,600) and DUT graduates (€1,500). All are stable compared with the salaries of the 2012 graduates.
Six out of ten Master's graduates work in a private company, two in the public sector and one in an association (chart 22.04a). The share of recruitment in the private sector is higher for the DUT (79%) and vocational Bachelor degree (85%) graduates.
'Master of Education' courses designed to prepare students for the competitive entrance examinations for entering the teaching profession have very specific occupational integration, with an employment rate of 97% and good employment conditions after 18 months. They mainly work in the public sector (92%) but their salaries are lower than for other Master's graduates.
For the same qualification, the employment rate varies slightly per field of education. In particular, more than 90% of disciplinary Master's graduates in Law, Economics and Management (LEM) and Science, Technology and Healthcare (STH) are in employment thirty months after graduating, compared with graduates in Human and Social Sciences (HSS) (86%) and Humanities, Languages and Arts (HLA) (87%) (chart 22.01b).
Similarly, as in previous years, LEM and STH graduates enjoy more favourable employment conditions than their HSS and HLA counterparts (chart 22.02b). They often obtain more stable, full-time contracts, and their net median monthly salaries are 20% higher. Nine out of ten STS graduates obtain managerial or intermediate professional jobs compared with 74% to 84% for the other fields of education. The larger share of public or charity sector jobs obtained by HSS and HLA graduates partly explains these pay differences (chart 22.04b).
1 Number of graduates in employment out of all graduates present in the job market.
2 In employment on a permanent contract, as a civil servant or a self-employed worker.
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Key figures
22.01a Occupational integration at 18 and 30 months of 2013 University technology diploma (DUT), vocational Bachelor's and Master's graduates (%)
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22.01b Occupational integration at 18 and 30 months of 2013 Master's graduates (excluding Teaching Master's) by discipline (%)
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22.02a Employment conditions of 2013 University technology diploma (DUT), vocational Bachelor's and Master's degree graduates, 30 months after graduating (%)
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22.02b Employment conditions of 2013 Master's graduates (excluding Teaching Master's) 30 months after graduating (%)
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22.03 Net monthly median salary at 18 and 30 months for 2013 Master's vocational Bachelor's and DUT graduates in full-time employment (€)
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22.04a Breakdown per type of employer of 2013 DUT, vocational Bachelor's and Master's degree graduates in employment 30 months after graduating (as a %)
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22.04b Breakdown per type of employer of 2013 Master's graduates (excluding Master of Education) in employment 30 months after graduating (in %)
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Related statistical publications
Alors que le taux de chômage des jeunes de 15 à 24 ans atteint 24,5 % (4ème trimestre 2015, enquête Emploi, INSEE) les diplômes universitaires, en particulier le master, restent une protection efficace face au chômage. Les conditions d’emploi et les caractéristiques des emplois occupés en début de carrière par les jeunes diplômé.e.s de master diffèrent nettement selon la spécialisation disciplinaire.
L’insertion professionnelle des diplômés de DUT est progressive, avec une amélioration de 9 points par rapport à la situation à 18 mois.
These differences are primarily due to the subject of the Master’s degree. In disciplines in which the number of women is the highest, opportunities in the employment market are less favourable. However, in disciplines with fewer women, professional inequalities are significant. In addition, regardless of the discipline, career paths diverge, with more women in employment in the non-profit and public sectors, where pay is usually lower and contracts less stable.
For a given discipline, type of employer and sector of activity, inequalities persist, above all with regard to pay, in which the residual difference is the largest, representing two-thirds of the differences noted.
Translation
22 - l'insertion professionnelle des diplômés de l'université (Master, DUT, LP)