Working toward Better Pay : Earning Dynamics in Ghana and Tanzania
Improving access to productive employment is a key policy challenge, especially in low-income countries (LICs), where the only asset in abundance is labor. Building on ongoing research on earnings mobility, this study uses unusually rich longitudin...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC: World Bank
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/05/19628735/working-toward-better-pay-earning-dynamics-ghana-tanzania http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18553 |
Summary: | Improving access to productive
employment is a key policy challenge, especially in
low-income countries (LICs), where the only asset in
abundance is labor. Building on ongoing research on earnings
mobility, this study uses unusually rich longitudinal data
from Ghana and Tanzania to identify engines of, and barriers
to, earnings and earnings mobility. It examines the role of
individual characteristics such as gender, age, and skills
and characteristics of the job, but it also focuses on the
role of job switches for example, moves into and out of
self-employment. It zooms in particularly on the drivers of
transitions between low-paying and high-paying jobs, and
addresses questions such as whether being low paid is a
transitory or permanent phenomenon, and whether it has a
scarring effect on an individual's employment
prospects. The extent to which earnings dynamics differ for
women and young adults is also discussed in detail. The
cross-country comparison of earnings dynamics and labor
market transitions helps shed light on the institutional
factors that promote labor market mobility and
entrepreneurship. The report is organized as follows:
chapter one gives introduction. Chapter two presents a brief
review of related literature. Chapter three gives a
descriptive overview of the labor markets in the two
countries. Chapter four examines the determinants of
earnings levels. Chapter five examines determinants of
earnings growth. Chapter six focuses on low-pay and high-pay
transitions and analyzes whether the experience of being in
a low-paying job undermines an individual's future
earnings prospects. Chapter seven discusses key policy implications. |
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