Abstract:
This study aims to investigate the impact of educational and skill mismatches on job
satisfaction among graduate employees in public sector organisations in the Jaffna
District. Sri Lanka faces a graduate employment gap due to a supply-driven higher
education system and a skills mismatch with the needs of the private sector. As a
result, this mismatch has compelled graduates to rely on public sector organisations
and to seek government intervention in job provision. The study uses deductive,
correlational, and cross-sectional approaches, with a stratified random sample of 201
(N=408) development officers in Jaffna District. A Google Form was used to collect
data; 156 responded (78%). The data analysis was conducted using SPSS. The
internal consistency of the 16 items was good (α=0.700). The study reveals a
perceived educational mismatch in the workplace, employees feeling slightly
overqualified for their roles. However, there is a neutral perception of under education and a slightly above-average mismatch between their field of study and
their job roles. Development officers reported strong skills in communication,
problem-solving, critical and creative thinking, exceeding role demands. Job
satisfaction was high in coworkers, opportunities and rewards, supervision,
operational rules and procedures, fringe benefits, and the nature of work and
performance. The study tested four hypotheses: over-education negatively impacts
job satisfaction, under-education positively impacts job satisfaction, different fields
of study negatively impact job satisfaction, and skill mismatch negatively impacts job
satisfaction. Three hypotheses were rejected, while the relationship between under education mismatch and job satisfaction was accepted. The findings suggest that
mismatches in education, field of study, and skills can significantly impact job
satisfaction. The study suggests that graduate employees in public sector
organisations operate within their comfort zone, overlooking their intrinsic value and
external opportunities, which leads to reduced productivity, underutilisation of
educational investments, and an increased burden on the government budget, and
recommends aligning graduate output with labour market demands.