Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina

This paper assesses the short-term job generation potential of infrastructure investments in Argentina. The analysis is based on a 2017 Input-Output model with a breakdown of the construction sector into multiple infrastructure subsectors. The disa...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/721891623745711077/Jobs-and-Distributive-Effects-of-Infrastructure-Investment-The-Case-of-Argentina
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35850
id okr-10986-35850
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-358502021-06-30T05:11:09Z Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina World Bank INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT JOB CREATION PRIVATE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE SECTOR This paper assesses the short-term job generation potential of infrastructure investments in Argentina. The analysis is based on a 2017 Input-Output model with a breakdown of the construction sector into multiple infrastructure subsectors. The disaggregation was possible with a novel database with cost structures for about 70 infrastructure projects. The analysis reveals significant heterogeneity across subsectors of infrastructure investment, with job generation potential ranging between 15,000 and 49,000 annualized direct, indirect and induced jobs in the short-term per US1 billion dollars invested, depending on the type of infrastructure project considered. The results show that public housing and rural road maintenance, followed by railway construction, water and sanitation and urban infrastructure have the highest potential to generate jobs in the short-term. On the other hand, road construction and energy distribution are activities with lower short-term generation potential, but with higher long-term impact on GDP growth according to their elasticities estimates in the literature. The analysis reveals the characteristics of the projects that are determinants of the degree of job generation potential, these include: labor intensity, split between skilled and unskilled labor, ratio of imports to total investment, technology, among others. Infrastructure investment in sectors with high potential for employment generation compares favorably with pure demand stimulus check programs in terms of the effects on income growth for the poor and across all quintiles. However, infrastructure investment in sectors with low employment potential tend to have relatively more limited distributive effects. It is argued that to optimize job generation potential of infrastructure investment in the short-term as a fiscal stimulus, and in the long-term as a foundation for future growth, interventions must be ready for implementation, with low risk of delays, and selected based on sound economic analysis. Also, policymakers must pursue projects with high economic returns to enable a more productive and competitive economy and look for opportunities in which public sector investment can crowd in rather than crowd out private sector investment. 2021-06-29T14:21:09Z 2021-06-29T14:21:09Z 2021-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/721891623745711077/Jobs-and-Distributive-Effects-of-Infrastructure-Investment-The-Case-of-Argentina http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35850 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Infrastructure Study Latin America & Caribbean Argentina
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
JOB CREATION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE SECTOR
spellingShingle INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
JOB CREATION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE SECTOR
World Bank
Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Argentina
description This paper assesses the short-term job generation potential of infrastructure investments in Argentina. The analysis is based on a 2017 Input-Output model with a breakdown of the construction sector into multiple infrastructure subsectors. The disaggregation was possible with a novel database with cost structures for about 70 infrastructure projects. The analysis reveals significant heterogeneity across subsectors of infrastructure investment, with job generation potential ranging between 15,000 and 49,000 annualized direct, indirect and induced jobs in the short-term per US1 billion dollars invested, depending on the type of infrastructure project considered. The results show that public housing and rural road maintenance, followed by railway construction, water and sanitation and urban infrastructure have the highest potential to generate jobs in the short-term. On the other hand, road construction and energy distribution are activities with lower short-term generation potential, but with higher long-term impact on GDP growth according to their elasticities estimates in the literature. The analysis reveals the characteristics of the projects that are determinants of the degree of job generation potential, these include: labor intensity, split between skilled and unskilled labor, ratio of imports to total investment, technology, among others. Infrastructure investment in sectors with high potential for employment generation compares favorably with pure demand stimulus check programs in terms of the effects on income growth for the poor and across all quintiles. However, infrastructure investment in sectors with low employment potential tend to have relatively more limited distributive effects. It is argued that to optimize job generation potential of infrastructure investment in the short-term as a fiscal stimulus, and in the long-term as a foundation for future growth, interventions must be ready for implementation, with low risk of delays, and selected based on sound economic analysis. Also, policymakers must pursue projects with high economic returns to enable a more productive and competitive economy and look for opportunities in which public sector investment can crowd in rather than crowd out private sector investment.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
title_short Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
title_full Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
title_fullStr Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Jobs and Distributive Effects of Infrastructure Investment : The Case of Argentina
title_sort jobs and distributive effects of infrastructure investment : the case of argentina
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/721891623745711077/Jobs-and-Distributive-Effects-of-Infrastructure-Investment-The-Case-of-Argentina
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35850
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