Cover image for Working toward Better Pay : Earnings Dynamics in Ghana and Tanzania.
Working toward Better Pay : Earnings Dynamics in Ghana and Tanzania.
Title:
Working toward Better Pay : Earnings Dynamics in Ghana and Tanzania.
Author:
Falco, Paolo.
ISBN:
9781464802096
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (91 pages)
Series:
World Bank Studies
Contents:
Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Executive Summary -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Chapter 2 What Did We Know about the Determinants of Earnings and Earnings Growth in Ghana and Tanzania? -- The Determinants of Earnings Levels -- The Determinants of Earnings Growth -- Evidence on Low-Pay Persistence and Scarring -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Data and Descriptive Statistics -- Ghana and Tanzania Urban Panel Surveys -- Construction of Key Explanatory Variables -- Descriptive Statistics -- Notes -- Chapter 4 The Determinants of Earnings Levels -- Framework and Baseline Specification -- Education Pays, and Pays More and More -- Special Challenges for Youth and Women -- Differences across Sectors -- Notes -- Chapter 5 The Determinants of Earnings Growth -- Framework -- A Bird's Eye View of Earnings Growth in Ghana and Tanzania -- Differences across Sectors -- Notes -- Chapter 6 Low-Pay/High-Pay Transitions -- Descriptive Statistics -- Econometric Framework -- Results -- Notes -- Chapter 7 Main Findings and Key Policy Implications -- Message 1: Job Characteristics Are an Important Determinant of Both Earnings Levels and Earnings Growth -- Message 2: Women and Youth Face Special Challenges -- Message 3: Skills Acquisition Is a Stepping Stone Toward Better Paying Jobs, at Least in Wage Employment, Especially for Women -- Message 4: Self-Employment Can Be Desirable -- Message 5: The Public Sector Wage Premium Is a Potential Barrier to the Efficient Working of the Labor Market -- Note -- Appendix A Summary Statistics and Variable Definitions -- Summary Statistics -- Variable Definitions -- Appendix B A Framework for Analyzing Earnings Panel Data -- Tackling the Endogeneity of Schooling -- Controlling for Unobserved Fixed Effects -- Sorting Matters, But Is Not the Entire Story.

What Do These Regressions Tell Us About Growth? Asymmetric Sectoral Switching Premia -- Appendix C A Framework for Analyzing Earnings Growth -- Econometric Framework -- Tackling Measurement Error: The Determinants of Earnings Growth over a Two-Year Period -- Controlling for Fixed Effects -- Appendix D A Framework for Analyzing Transitions between Low- and High-Paid Employment -- Econometric Framework -- Results -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Back Cover -- Boxes -- Figures -- Tables.
Abstract:
Improving the returns to labor for low-paid workers is a key policy challenge, especially in low-income countries (LICs) where earnings increases are the single most important source of poverty reduction and an important engine of shared prosperity. Yet, the understanding of individual earnings dynamics remains limited. The small-but growing-body of empirical literature on the factors leading to larger and faster pay increases points to strong persistence in earnings over time. However, it remains unclear to what extent this is due to differences in individual endowments rather than to the fact that being in low-paying jobs itself undermines future earnings prospects, and to what extent determinants of earnings vary across types of activities and sectors. The knowledge gap is particularly large for LICs due to the limited availability of reliable panel data. 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 relative role of individual endowments-such as gender, age, and skills-and characteristics of the job, but also focuses on the role of job switches-for example, moves into and out of self-employment. The analysis also zooms in 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. Tanzania and Ghana provide a particularly relevant context in which to examine these issues and the cross-country comparison helps shed light on the institutional factors that promote labor market mobility and entrepreneurship. The audience for this report is broad: it is

an important read for policy makers, academics, and development practitioners interested in reducing poverty and promoting shared prosperity in Ghana and Tanzania. However, its relevance spans well beyond the two countries analyzed to include all developing countries where self-employment in small-scale activities accounts for a very large proportion of all employment.
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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