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CH 9 Employment

The document discusses employment, migration, and urbanization issues in developing countries. It covers topics like unemployment statistics, rural-urban migration models, policies to address unemployment, and how fast economic growth can help reduce unemployment.

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Pavan Kumar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views22 pages

CH 9 Employment

The document discusses employment, migration, and urbanization issues in developing countries. It covers topics like unemployment statistics, rural-urban migration models, policies to address unemployment, and how fast economic growth can help reduce unemployment.

Uploaded by

Pavan Kumar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 22

Chapter 9

Employment,
Migration and
Urbanization

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 1


Employment, Migration &
Urbanization
 Production Function
 Uniqueness of Employment Problems in
LDCs
 Unemployment, Underemployment &
Statistics
 Disguised Unemployment
 Rural-urban Migration
 Harris-Todaro Model

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 2


Employment, Migration &
Urbanization

 Western Approaches to Unemployment


 Causes of Unemployment in LDCs
 Policies for Reducing Unemployment

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 3


The Production Function
 Y = F(L, K, N, E, T)
 means that output (or national
product) (Y) during a given time
period depends on the input flows of
labor (L), capital (K), natural
resources (N), and entrepreneurship
(E); and prevailing technology (T).

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 4


How unemployment in
LDCs is different
 Openly unemployed usually 15-24,
educated, and urban (at least in low-
income countries, especially in SSA and
South Asia).
 Women higher unemployment rate.
 Less likely from poorest 20% of
population.
 Potential source of unrest.
CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 5
Unemployment/labor force
 3.7% East & South Asia.
 8.2% China.
 9.2% Latin America.
 5.9% Middle East.
 14.2% Africa.
 11.1% Developing Europe & Central Asia.
 6.2% high-income countries (World Bank
2003h: 52-53, ILO 2000).

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 6


Labor absorption
 Assume labor force growing at sub-
Saharan Africas rate 2.7% yearly,
1992-2000.
 1/3 of labor force employed in non-
agriculture.
 1/3 X what = 0.027.
 1/3 X 0.081=0.027.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 7


Labor absorption
 Assume labor force growing at sub-Saharan
Africa’s rate 2.7% yearly, 1992-2000.
 1/3 of labor force employed in non-agriculture.
 1/3 X what = 0.027.
 1/3 X 0.081=0.027.
 Does non-agriculture labor demand
grow by 8.1% yearly?
 Not likely (see table 9.2, p. 314).

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 8


CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 9
CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 10
Disguised unemployment

 Zero marginal revenue productivity of


LDC labor.
 Theoretical basis – limited technical
substitutability of factors.
 Marginal worker or marginal hour (?).

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 11


Rural-urban migration
 LDC labor force growing 1.6% yearly.
 Urban labor force & population growing
2.4% yearly.
 LDC urban population/total population:
27% 1975, 35% 1992, 40% 2003.
 75% Latin America, 38% Asia, 33%
Africa, 75% DCs, 47% world.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 12


CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 13
LDC rural-urban migration

TWO MODELS
1. Lewis model.
2. Harris-Todaro model.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 14


LDC rural-urban migration
Harris-Todaro model
 Migration depends on expected
earnings.
 Wages X probability of employment..
 Rs 6000 X 0.20 = Rs 1200 < Rs 3000
 No migration
 Rs 6000 X 0.60 = Rs 3600 > Rs 3000
 Labor will migrate

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 15


Critique of Harris-Todaro
 ILO indicates urban/rural income is 2 in Asia &
Latin America & 4-5 in Africa.
 At Asian ratios, urban unemployment should be
50% to equate expected income.
 Urban informal sector – petty traders, artisans, &
self-employed – absorbs many.
 Low startup costs, no barriers to entry, hire labor
below minimum wage.
 Informal sector 34% Mexico City, 45% Bogota,
43% Kolkata, 50% Lagos.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 16


Effect of other amenities
 Housing, shopping, transport, health
care, schools.
 Overurbanization in many LDCs.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 17


Keynesian approach not so
applicable to LDCs
 What is the Keynesian approach?
 Why is the Keynesian approach
NOT so applicable to LDCs?

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 18


Why is the Keynesian approach
not so applicable to LDCs?
 Supply-side shortages (managers, capital,
foreign exchange, materials) limit output &
employment expansion.
 Increased urban demand spurs more entrants
into urban labor force.
 Government spending/GNP lower than in DCs.
 Employment growth slower than output
growth because of capital-intensive techniques.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 19


Causes of LDC unemployment
 Unsuitability of technology – rigid
factor requirements.
 Factor price distortions
High modern-sector wages.
Low capital costs.
 Unemployment among educated.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 20


Policies to reduce unemployment
 Family planning programs to reduce
population growth.
 Increased rural economic development.
 Reducing urban bias.
 Intermediate technology and other
modifications to inappropriate technology.
 Reducing factor price distortions.
 Reform the educational system.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 21


The best antidote for unemployment

Fast growth (such as in South Korea


& Taiwan) is generally the best
antidote for unemployment.

CHAPTER 9 ©E.Wayne Nafziger Development Economics 22

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