Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.

This paper provides an overview of how African labor markets have performed in the 1990s. It is argued that the failure of African labor markets to create good paying jobs has resulted in excess labor supply in the form of either open unemployment or a growing self-employment sector. One explanation...

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Váldodahkkit: Kingdon, G, Sandefur, J, Teal, F
Materiálatiipa: Working paper
Giella:English
Almmustuhtton: GPRG 2005
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author Kingdon, G
Sandefur, J
Teal, F
author_facet Kingdon, G
Sandefur, J
Teal, F
author_sort Kingdon, G
collection OXFORD
description This paper provides an overview of how African labor markets have performed in the 1990s. It is argued that the failure of African labor markets to create good paying jobs has resulted in excess labor supply in the form of either open unemployment or a growing self-employment sector. One explanation for this outcome is a lack of labor market 'flexibility' keeping formal sector wages above their equilibrium level and restricting job creation. We identify three attributes of labor market flexibility. First whether real wages decline over time, secondly the tendency for wages to adjust in the face of unemployment, and thirdly the extent of wage differentials between sectors and/or firms of various size. Recent research shows that real wages in Africa during the 1990s may have been more downwardly flexible than previously thought and have been surprisingly responsive to unemployment rates, yet large wage differentials between formal and informal sector firms remain. This third sense of the term inflexibility can explain a common factor across diverse African economies - the high income divide between those working in large firms and those not. Those working in the thriving selfemployment sector in Ghana have something in common with the unemployed in South Africa - both have very low income opportunities relative to those in large firms.
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spelling oxford-uuid:fd873efb-d121-4ae7-8473-d14868c85e8a2022-03-27T13:29:26ZLabor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:fd873efb-d121-4ae7-8473-d14868c85e8aEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsGPRG2005Kingdon, GSandefur, JTeal, FThis paper provides an overview of how African labor markets have performed in the 1990s. It is argued that the failure of African labor markets to create good paying jobs has resulted in excess labor supply in the form of either open unemployment or a growing self-employment sector. One explanation for this outcome is a lack of labor market 'flexibility' keeping formal sector wages above their equilibrium level and restricting job creation. We identify three attributes of labor market flexibility. First whether real wages decline over time, secondly the tendency for wages to adjust in the face of unemployment, and thirdly the extent of wage differentials between sectors and/or firms of various size. Recent research shows that real wages in Africa during the 1990s may have been more downwardly flexible than previously thought and have been surprisingly responsive to unemployment rates, yet large wage differentials between formal and informal sector firms remain. This third sense of the term inflexibility can explain a common factor across diverse African economies - the high income divide between those working in large firms and those not. Those working in the thriving selfemployment sector in Ghana have something in common with the unemployed in South Africa - both have very low income opportunities relative to those in large firms.
spellingShingle Kingdon, G
Sandefur, J
Teal, F
Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title_full Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title_fullStr Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title_full_unstemmed Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title_short Labor Market Flexibility, Wages and Incomes in sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.
title_sort labor market flexibility wages and incomes in sub saharan africa in the 1990s
work_keys_str_mv AT kingdong labormarketflexibilitywagesandincomesinsubsaharanafricainthe1990s
AT sandefurj labormarketflexibilitywagesandincomesinsubsaharanafricainthe1990s
AT tealf labormarketflexibilitywagesandincomesinsubsaharanafricainthe1990s