2013
DOI: 10.5089/9781484389195.001
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Africa's Got Work to Do: Employment Prospects in the New Century

Abstract: Estimates of the current and future structure of employment in sub-Saharan Africa (2005-20) are obtained based on household survey estimates for 28 countries and an elasticity-type model that relates employment to economic growth and demographic outcomes. Agriculture still employs the majority of the labor force although workers are shifting slowly out of the sector. Sub-Saharan Africa's projected rapid labor force growth, combined with a low baseline level of private sector wage employment, means that even if… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
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“…To investigate this issue empirically, analytical simplifications are needed. Similar to the categorizations of Fox et al (2013) we distinguish workers into three jobs categories, each of which represents a bundle of attributes. These are workers in: (i) unwaged, household agriculture (HAG); (ii) non-agricultural informal firms (NIF); and (iii) the formal wage sector (FW).…”
Section: Jobs Bundlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To investigate this issue empirically, analytical simplifications are needed. Similar to the categorizations of Fox et al (2013) we distinguish workers into three jobs categories, each of which represents a bundle of attributes. These are workers in: (i) unwaged, household agriculture (HAG); (ii) non-agricultural informal firms (NIF); and (iii) the formal wage sector (FW).…”
Section: Jobs Bundlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as the analysis of Fox et al. () has shown, given the rapid growth of the labour force in low‐ and middle‐income SSA, there is virtually no possibility that wage employment alone will absorb new entrants to the labour force , even if policies were able to generate an employment growth as rapid as Vietnam achieved between 1990 and 2010. Mozambique, with a poorly‐educated labour force and limited infrastructure, is even further behind countries such as Ghana and Kenya, where private wage employment is over 10% of total primary employment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In essence, Mozambique and many other SSA countries, through their development plans, assume that poverty reduction through improvements in earnings and productivity is only possible in the private wage employment and in agriculture sectors (or at least it is so much higher in these that only these two sectors warrant attention). 11 However, as the analysis of Fox et al (2013) has shown, given the rapid growth of the labour force in low-and middle-income SSA, there is virtually no possibility that wage employment alone will absorb new entrants to the labour force, even if policies were able to generate an employment growth as rapid as Vietnam achieved between 1990 and 2010. Mozambique, with a poorlyeducated labour force and limited infrastructure, is even further behind countries such as Ghana and Kenya, where private wage employment is over 10% of total primary employment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In SSA, in contrast, most countries have not entered a rapid demographic transition with falling birth rates similar to that in many Asian countries, and the growth in the share of GDP accounted for by manufacturing has been much slower than in Asia. For example, the manufacturing output of East Asian low-middle income countries in 2010 accounted for roughly double the corresponding output of SSA (Fox et al, 2013). Thus, rural wage rate growth in SSA is likely to be much slower in the next 10 years than Asian rice-producing countries.…”
Section: Increasing Farm-level Productivitymentioning
confidence: 98%