940 resultados para employment growth
Resumo:
La política social y el mercado de trabajo son dimensiones del sistema social mutuamente implicadas en las sociedades industriales capitalistas. Sin embargo, una interpretación apresurada sobre el mundo social podría opacar los procesos que hacen que en un grupo de la población se yuxtapongan: una inserción laboral precaria dentro del mercado de trabajo informal junto con la (re) construcción de ese grupo como sujeto-objeto de políticas sociales. El artículo tiene por propósito problematizar las representaciones dominantes sobre el trabajo y su relación con las prácticas de organización de los hogares, considerando que en su interior la dimensión laboral se articula con otros recursos (provenientes de las políticas sociales). De modo más específico, el objetivo se orienta a la descripción y análisis de prácticas y representaciones sobre la situaci162n ocupacional de jefas/es y cónyuges que realizan actividades laborales en la informalidad de subsistencia. Se plantea como hipótesis exploratoria que en el período actual las condiciones de trabajo y representaciones de los trabajadores ocupados en ese tipo de actividades expresarían la existencia de un tipo de informalidad fuertemente segregada respecto de las actividades productivas, un en un contexto de crecimiento del empleo. También se sostiene que las formas bajo las cuales estas inserciones laborales se articulan con los planes sociales (como un nivel específico de política social) evidenciarían el carácter de la contribución estatal a la reproducción de las condiciones de vida de los trabajadores insertos en este tipo de informalidad. Los hallazgos presentados constituyen un avance de investigación sobre la reproducción de la marginalidad urbana en el Conurbano Bonaerense. Parte del trabajo de campo se realizó durante el año 2008, en un barrio del Partido de Almirante Brown. Se organizaron dos grupos de discusión: uno con mujeres perceptoras de planes y otro con hombres que realizaban changas como actividad principal. Con el objeto de aportar datos acerca de las condiciones materiales de los hogares, se aplicó un cuestionario a los participantes. Junto con esta información, se analizaron registros de campo tomados en observaciones realizadas en diversos espacios del barrio
Resumo:
La política social y el mercado de trabajo son dimensiones del sistema social mutuamente implicadas en las sociedades industriales capitalistas. Sin embargo, una interpretación apresurada sobre el mundo social podría opacar los procesos que hacen que en un grupo de la población se yuxtapongan: una inserción laboral precaria dentro del mercado de trabajo informal junto con la (re) construcción de ese grupo como sujeto-objeto de políticas sociales. El artículo tiene por propósito problematizar las representaciones dominantes sobre el trabajo y su relación con las prácticas de organización de los hogares, considerando que en su interior la dimensión laboral se articula con otros recursos (provenientes de las políticas sociales). De modo más específico, el objetivo se orienta a la descripción y análisis de prácticas y representaciones sobre la situaci162n ocupacional de jefas/es y cónyuges que realizan actividades laborales en la informalidad de subsistencia. Se plantea como hipótesis exploratoria que en el período actual las condiciones de trabajo y representaciones de los trabajadores ocupados en ese tipo de actividades expresarían la existencia de un tipo de informalidad fuertemente segregada respecto de las actividades productivas, un en un contexto de crecimiento del empleo. También se sostiene que las formas bajo las cuales estas inserciones laborales se articulan con los planes sociales (como un nivel específico de política social) evidenciarían el carácter de la contribución estatal a la reproducción de las condiciones de vida de los trabajadores insertos en este tipo de informalidad. Los hallazgos presentados constituyen un avance de investigación sobre la reproducción de la marginalidad urbana en el Conurbano Bonaerense. Parte del trabajo de campo se realizó durante el año 2008, en un barrio del Partido de Almirante Brown. Se organizaron dos grupos de discusión: uno con mujeres perceptoras de planes y otro con hombres que realizaban changas como actividad principal. Con el objeto de aportar datos acerca de las condiciones materiales de los hogares, se aplicó un cuestionario a los participantes. Junto con esta información, se analizaron registros de campo tomados en observaciones realizadas en diversos espacios del barrio
Resumo:
La política social y el mercado de trabajo son dimensiones del sistema social mutuamente implicadas en las sociedades industriales capitalistas. Sin embargo, una interpretación apresurada sobre el mundo social podría opacar los procesos que hacen que en un grupo de la población se yuxtapongan: una inserción laboral precaria dentro del mercado de trabajo informal junto con la (re) construcción de ese grupo como sujeto-objeto de políticas sociales. El artículo tiene por propósito problematizar las representaciones dominantes sobre el trabajo y su relación con las prácticas de organización de los hogares, considerando que en su interior la dimensión laboral se articula con otros recursos (provenientes de las políticas sociales). De modo más específico, el objetivo se orienta a la descripción y análisis de prácticas y representaciones sobre la situaci162n ocupacional de jefas/es y cónyuges que realizan actividades laborales en la informalidad de subsistencia. Se plantea como hipótesis exploratoria que en el período actual las condiciones de trabajo y representaciones de los trabajadores ocupados en ese tipo de actividades expresarían la existencia de un tipo de informalidad fuertemente segregada respecto de las actividades productivas, un en un contexto de crecimiento del empleo. También se sostiene que las formas bajo las cuales estas inserciones laborales se articulan con los planes sociales (como un nivel específico de política social) evidenciarían el carácter de la contribución estatal a la reproducción de las condiciones de vida de los trabajadores insertos en este tipo de informalidad. Los hallazgos presentados constituyen un avance de investigación sobre la reproducción de la marginalidad urbana en el Conurbano Bonaerense. Parte del trabajo de campo se realizó durante el año 2008, en un barrio del Partido de Almirante Brown. Se organizaron dos grupos de discusión: uno con mujeres perceptoras de planes y otro con hombres que realizaban changas como actividad principal. Con el objeto de aportar datos acerca de las condiciones materiales de los hogares, se aplicó un cuestionario a los participantes. Junto con esta información, se analizaron registros de campo tomados en observaciones realizadas en diversos espacios del barrio
Resumo:
We examine changes in the location of economic activity in Cambodia between 1998 and 2008 in terms of employment growth. During this period, Cambodia joined ASEAN and increased trade with neighboring countries. Drawing on the predictions of the new economic geography, we focus on frontier regions such as border regions and international port cities. We examine the changing state of manufacturing in Cambodia from its initial concentration in Greater Phnom Penh to its growth in the frontier regions. The results suggest that economic integration and concomitant trade linkages may lead to the industrial development of frontier regions as well as the metropolitan areas in Cambodia.
Resumo:
There is general consensus that to achieve employment growth, especially for vulnerable groups, it is not sufficient to simply kick-start economic growth: skills among both the high- and low-skilled population need to be improved. In particular, we argue that if the lack of graduates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) is a true problem, it needs to be tackled via incentives and not simply via public campaigns: students are not enrolling in ‘hard-science’ subjects because the opportunity cost is very high. As far as the low-skilled population is concerned, we encourage EU and national policy-makers to invest in a more comprehensive view of this phenomenon. The ‘low-skilled’ label can hide a number of different scenarios: labour market detachment, migration, and obsolete skills that are the result of macroeconomic structural changes. For this reason lifelong learning is necessary to keep up with new technology and to shield workers from the risk of skills obsolescence and detachment from the labour market.
Resumo:
This paper analyzes whether differences in institutional structures on capital markets contribute to explaining why some DECO-countries, in particular the Anglo-Saxon countries, have been much more successful over the last two decades in producing employment growth and in reducing unemployment than most continental-European DECO-countries. It is argued that the often-blamed labor market rigidities alone, while important, do not provide a satisfactory explanation for these differences across countries and over time. Financial constraints are potentially important obstacles against creating new firms and jobs and thus against coping well with structural change and against moving successfully toward the "new economy". Highly developed venture capital markets should help to alleviate such financial constraints. This view that labor-market institutions should be supplemented by capital market imperfections for explaining differences in employment performances is supported by our panel data analysis, in which venture capital turns out to be a significant institutional variable.
Resumo:
The provision of advisory support to small firms is almost ubiquitous in OECD countries, although it is organised in different ways and is justified on slightly different grounds. In England publicly supported advisory services are provided through the Business Link (BL) network. Here, we consider two questions: what sort of companies receive advisory support from BL; and, what types of firms benefit most from that support? Our analysis is based on a telephone survey of 2000 firms, around half of which had received intensive assistance from BL between April and October 2003. Probit analysis suggests that the probability of receiving assistance was greater among younger businesses, those with larger numbers of directors in the firm, and those with more gender diversity among the firm's leadership team. Our business-growth models suggest that BL intensive assistance was having a positive effect on employment growth in 2003. BL had a positive but insignificant impact on sales growth over the period. Employment growth effects tend to be larger where firms have a management and organisational structure, which is more conducive to absorbing and making use of external advice. The analysis suggests that BL might increase its impact through targeting these larger, more export-orientated, businesses. Employment growth effects differ little, however, depending on either the ethnic or the gender diversity of the leadership team.
Resumo:
One of the key policy objectives of government at national and regional level, is to overcome the constraints preventing local industry achieving greater competitiveness in the international market-place. This paper examines the impact of grant assistance to Northern Ireland small firms delivered over the period 1994 ^ 97 by the former Local Enterprise Development Unit through its Growth Business Support Programme (GBSP). Previous work by the authors showed that there was some tentative evidence to suggest a link between employment growth and grant aid provided to very small firms (fewer than 10 employees) assisted under the GBSP. The central objective of the empirical work reported in this paper is to extend the previous analysis by understanding the extent to which the value of financial assistance influences growth (employment, turnover, and productivity measures) and if differential impacts arise depending on the nature and timing (lag structures) of the grant assistance.
Resumo:
This thesis develops the requirements of the Cumbria Division of the MAFF to have detailed information on a number of rural topics of particular concern to the area's socia-economic advisory service. Information was generated upon the effects of road developments upon agriculture; the possibility of economic and employment growth through tourism, industry, forestry and agriculture; and upon their relationship with conservation and development control issues generally. A working conference was organised (The Whitbarrow Exercise) to review in specific terms a number of the above problems, in which representatives of the major groups active in rural policy formulation and implementation participated. The study was extended to consider these policy issues on a more prosperous agricultural estate; and in the county of Cumbria as a whole. An examination of the development and likely future impact of agricultural policy upon rural policy generally was also undertaken. All the research was set in the context of an extensive literature review. The results indicate that while state intervention to relieve those problems collectively known as rural deprivation still has an important place in modern rural policy, the scope for such intervention to be successful is limited. Opportunities for employment and wealth creation through tourism, forestry, industry and agriculture are limited for social and economic reasons; developments in these sectors can have adverse effects upon the environment; can compound existing problems; and are often resisted by local people. The lack of success of such ventures indicates continued structural change within rural communities, with some adverse effects for the less privileged members. Recognising this it is argued that fural policy seeks to adapt to, rather than attempt to fundamentally alter inevitable change, recognising that in the long term social and structural problems will resolve themselves. It is further argued that a reduction in state support for agriculture appears inevitable, and this can bring considerable conservation benefits, even in upland areas where positive links between agriculture and conservation have been found by some commentators. It is also argued that for social and economic reasons, and because of the declining importance of agricultural land, a vigorous landscape and ecological conservation policy is pursued by planning authorities and is reasonable. With regard to road developments on agricultural land, the research has shawn that although it is the norm far the agricultural community to experience severe difficulty during developments, these can be overcame by increasing the resources of professional expertise available to affected farmers. This indicates a possible important increased role for the MAFF in the development process.
Resumo:
This paper compares the impact of institutions on men and women’s decisions to establish new business start-ups between 2001 and 2006. We use data from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor survey (GEM) which cover at least 2,000 individuals per year in each of up to 55 countries and have merged it with country-level data, from the World Bank, Economist Intelligence Unit, Polity IV and the Heritage Foundation. We find that women are less likely to undertake entrepreneurial activity in countries where the state sector is larger, but the rule of law is not generally found to have gender-specific effects. However, more detailed institutional components of discrimination against women, in particular, restrictions on freedom of movement away from home, make it less likely for women to have high entrepreneurial aspirations in terms of employment growth, even if their entry into entrepreneurial activities, including self-employment, is not affected by this.
Resumo:
Purpose: This paper aims to contribute to the understanding of the factors that influence small to medium-sized enterprise (SME) performance and particularly, growth. Design/methodology/approach: This paper utilises an original data set of 360 SMEs employing 5-249 people to run logit regression models of employment growth, turnover growth and profitability. The models include characteristics of the businesses, the owner-managers and their strategies. Findings: The results suggest that size and age of enterprise dominate performance and are more important than strategy and the entrepreneurial characteristics of the owner. Having a business plan was also found to be important. Research limitations/implications: The results contribute to the development of theoretical and knowledge bases, as well as offering results that will be of interest to research and policy communities. The results are limited to a single survey, using cross-sectional data. Practical implications: The findings have a bearing on business growth strategy for policy makers. The results suggest that policy measures that promote the take-up of business plans and are targeted at younger, larger-sized businesses may have the greatest impact in terms of helping to facilitate business growth. Originality/value: A novel feature of the models is the incorporation of entrepreneurial traits and whether there were any collaborative joint venture arrangements. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Resumo:
This dissertation consists of three separate essays on job search and labor market dynamics. In the first essay, “The Impact of Labor Market Conditions on Job Creation: Evidence from Firm Level Data”, I study how much changes in labor market conditions reduce employment fluctuations over the business cycle. Changes in labor market conditions make hiring more expensive during expansions and cheaper during recessions, creating counter-cyclical incentives for job creation. I estimate firm level elasticities of labor demand with respect to changes in labor market conditions, considering two margins: changes in labor market tightness and changes in wages. Using employer-employee matched data from Brazil, I find that all firms are more sensitive to changes in wages rather than labor market tightness, and there is substantial heterogeneity in labor demand elasticity across regions. Based on these results, I demonstrate that changes in labor market conditions reduce the variance of employment growth over the business cycle by 20% in a median region, and this effect is equally driven by changes along each margin. Moreover, I show that the magnitude of the effect of labor market conditions on employment growth can be significantly affected by economic policy. In particular, I document that the rapid growth of the national minimum wages in Brazil in 1997-2010 amplified the impact of the change in labor market conditions during local expansions and diminished this impact during local recessions.
In the second essay, “A Framework for Estimating Persistence of Local Labor
Demand Shocks”, I propose a decomposition which allows me to study the persistence of local labor demand shocks. Persistence of labor demand shocks varies across industries, and the incidence of shocks in a region depends on the regional industrial composition. As a result, less diverse regions are more likely to experience deeper shocks, but not necessarily more long lasting shocks. Building on this idea, I propose a decomposition of local labor demand shocks into idiosyncratic location shocks and nationwide industry shocks and estimate the variance and the persistence of these shocks using the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) in 1990-2013.
In the third essay, “Conditional Choice Probability Estimation of Continuous- Time Job Search Models”, co-authored with Peter Arcidiacono and Arnaud Maurel, we propose a novel, computationally feasible method of estimating non-stationary job search models. Non-stationary job search models arise in many applications, where policy change can be anticipated by the workers. The most prominent example of such policy is the expiration of unemployment benefits. However, estimating these models still poses a considerable computational challenge, because of the need to solve a differential equation numerically at each step of the optimization routine. We overcome this challenge by adopting conditional choice probability methods, widely used in dynamic discrete choice literature, to job search models and show how the hazard rate out of unemployment and the distribution of the accepted wages, which can be estimated in many datasets, can be used to infer the value of unemployment. We demonstrate how to apply our method by analyzing the effect of the unemployment benefit expiration on duration of unemployment using the data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) in 1996-2007.
Resumo:
This thesis consists of an introductory chapter and four individual papers. In each paper the relationship between some form of spatial diversity and economic performance is analyzed. Diversity is treated as a potential source of externality effects, mainly in the form of knowledge spillovers. The first paper studies the impact of a broad range of spatial externalities on the productivity of manufacturing plants. While finding positive effects of specialization and competition, there is no support for positive spillovers of either related or unrelated industry diversity. The second paper argues that relatedness should be framed at the level of individuals and consequently should be measured in terms of, for example, education and occupation rather than industry belonging. The results show that educational- and occupational related diversity matter for regional productivity growth, while related industry diversity is positively related to employment growth. The third paper analyzes the importance of neighborhood related diversity, in terms of both industries and education, and internal human capital for firms’ propensity to innovate. The findings support that education and skills are strongly related to firm innovation. Additionally, firms in metropolitan regions are more innovative in neighborhoods with more related diversity in industries, while firms in rural regions seem to benefit more from related diversity in education. In the fourth paper, the location factor of interest is segregation, which may be regarded as inverse diversity. The results show that neighborhood segregation has a negative effect on individual employment. However, it is not the spatial separation of individuals with different backgrounds that causes lower employment but rather the distress of segregated neighborhoods.
Resumo:
New ventures are considered to be a major source of small firm growth. In Indian context the contribution of new ventures in terms of new employment, production and exports has largely remained unexplored. It is equally important and unexplored, the significance of the contribution of bank credit to the growth of new ventures in India. This paper is an attempt to throw light on these two aspects. The research is based on secondary data of the liberalized period provided by Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India. To analyze the influence of bank credit growth on new ventures and the influence of new ventures on growth of additional employment, additional production and additional exports, we used a Bi-Variate Vector Auto Regression. Based on the model generated, Granger causality tests are conducted to obtain the results. The study found that rate of growth of bank credit causes the number of new ventures, implying any increase in the rate of growth of bank credit will be beneficial to the growth of new ventures. The study also concluded that new ventures are not causing the growth of additional employment or additional production. However new ventures cause the growth of additional exports. This is reasonable as entrepreneurs start their new ventures with minimum possible employment and relatively low rate of capacity utilization and they come up to take advantage of the process of globalization by catering to the international market.