Cover image for More and Better Jobs in South Asia.
More and Better Jobs in South Asia.
Title:
More and Better Jobs in South Asia.
Author:
Bank, World.
ISBN:
9780821389133
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (432 pages)
Series:
South Asia Development Matters
Contents:
Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- 1 Overview -- South Asia's track record -- Determinants of job quality and the employment challenge -- Improving an inconducive business environment -- Improving workers' skills -- Reforming labor market institutions -- Creating jobs in conflict-affected areas -- Conclusion -- Annex 1A  Summary statistics on South Asian countries -- Annex 1B  Definition of key labor market terms -- Annex 1C  What is a "better" job, and which jobs are "better"? -- Notes -- References -- 2 Growth and Job Quality in South Asia -- Economic growth in South Asia -- Sources of future growth -- The track record on employment -- The urgency of reform -- Annex 2A  Methodology for decomposing growth -- Annex 2B  Sources of average annual growth in output per worker -- Annex 2C  Shares of agriculture, industry, and services in employment and GDP -- Annex 2D  Methodology and data sources for labor force projections -- Annex 2E  Poverty rates and the number of working poor in South Asia -- Annex 2F  Analysis of poverty and unemployment in India -- Notes -- References -- 3 A Profile of South Asia at Work -- Overview of employment and labor force participation in South Asia -- The nature of employment -- Where are the better jobs? -- Who holds better jobs? -- Annex 3A  Definitions and criteria used in profile of South Asia at work -- Annex 3B  Regional employment patterns -- Notes -- References -- 4 What Is Preventing Firms from Creating More and Better Jobs? -- Methodological framework -- Constraints in the urban formal sector -- Constraints in the rural nonfarm and informal sectors -- Demand-side policy options -- Constraints facing potential firm entrants: Business entry regulations.

Annex 4A  Business environment constraints in high- and low-income states in India -- Annex 4B  Tax rates as a constraint to firms -- Annex 4C  Constraints facing nonbenchmark firms -- Annex 4D  Access to finance as a constraint to firms -- Annex 4E  Policy options for increasing access to finance -- Notes -- References -- 5 Opening the Door to Better Jobs by Improving Education and Skills -- Education and skills in South Asian labor markets -- Education and access to better  jobs -- The education challenge -- The next 20 years: Can South Asian countries improve the educational attainment of their labor forces? -- Addressing disadvantages before school: The role of early childhood development -- Primary and secondary education -- Tertiary education and preemployment training systems -- On-the-job training -- Annex 5A  Additional tables and figures on education and skills -- Annex 5B  Projections of the educational attainment of South Asia's population and labor force -- Notes -- References -- 6 The Role of Labor Market Regulations, Institutions, and Programs -- Labor market institutions, policies, and programs in the formal sector -- Labor market institutions, policies, and programs in the informal sector -- Annex 6A  Additional tables and figures on labor market regulations and institutions -- Notes -- References -- 7 Creating Jobs in Conflict-Affected Areas -- Characteristics and intensity of armed conflict in South Asia -- Constraints to job creation in conflict-affected areas -- Armed conflict and labor markets -- Facilitating private sector job creation -- Education service delivery in conflict situations -- Labor market policies and programs -- A jobs transition path in conflict zones -- Annex 7A  Definitions of high-conflict and low-conflict regions in selected South Asian countries.

Annex 7B  Labor market characteristics and educational attainment in high-conflict and low-conflict areas of selected South Asian countries -- Notes -- References -- Appendixes -- A Household surveys used -- B Methodology used to analyze labor transitions -- References -- Back Cover.
Abstract:
South Asia has created nearly 800,000 jobs per month during the last decade. Robust economic growth in large parts of the region has created better jobs -- those that pay higher wages for wage workers and reduce poverty for the self-employed, the largest segment of the region's employed. Going forward, South Asia faces the enormous challenge of absorbing 1 to 1.2 million entrants to the labor force every month for the next two decades at rising levels of productivity. This calls for an agenda that cuts across sectors and includes improving the reliability of electricity supply for firms in both urban and rural settings, dealing decisively with issues of governance and corruption, making access to land easier for urban informal firms and strengthening transport links between rural firms and their markets. It requires improving nutrition in early childhood to avoid cognitive impairment, intensifying the focus on quality of learning in education systems, equipping workers with the skills that employers demand, and reorienting labor market regulations and programs to protect workers rather than jobs. The continuance of high economic growth to help improve job quality is not assured. But the region's demography can provide a favorable tailwind. The growth of workers exceeds that of dependents in much of the region. The resources saved from having fewer dependents can be shifted to high-priority investments in physical and human capital accumulation necessary to create productive jobs in countries with an enabling policy framework. But the demographic window of opportunity is open for only the next three decades, a fact which lends urgency to the reform agenda.This book will be of interest to policy makers, their advisers, researchers and students of economics who seek solutions, not only to the challenge of creating more and better jobs in South Asia

but globally as well. It is the first title in South Asia Development Matters,a new series that will serve as a vehicle for in-depth synthesis of economic and policy analysis on key development topics for South Asia.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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