Overqualified
The term emerged in mid-twentieth-century American human resources practice as organizations formalized their hiring criteria. Job descriptions specified minimum qualifications, and the concept of overqualification arose as the implied ceiling. The reasoning was practical. A candidate with a doctoral degree applying for an entry-level clerical position was assumed to be a flight risk, someone who would leave as soon as a better opportunity appeared. The rejection was framed as a favor, both to the employer who would lose the investment in training and to the candidate who would supposedly be unhappy in the role.
The assumption embedded in the term is that people should seek work that matches their credentials, no more and no less. This assumption depends on a labor market that offers sufficient positions at every credential level, a condition that has not held reliably since the expansion of higher education outpaced the creation of jobs requiring advanced degrees. In a 2014 study, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that roughly forty-four percent of recent college graduates were working in jobs that did not require a bachelor's degree.
Overqualified functions differently depending on who it is applied to. Older workers returning to the labor market after layoffs encounter the label disproportionately, as do immigrants with credentials from other countries that the local system does not recognize. In both cases, the word converts structural failures of the labor market into an individual problem located inside the worker. The system produced the mismatch, but the language assigns the blame to the person who has too much of what the system claims to value.
-
Mid-20th centuryAmerican human resources departments formalize hiring criteria and the concept of overqualification emerges as the implied ceiling on candidate suitability.
-
2014A Federal Reserve Bank of New York study finds roughly forty-four percent of recent college graduates working in jobs that do not require a bachelor's degree.