Improving Global Economic Patterns of Growth and Employment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Improving Global Economic Patterns of Growth and Employment

Description:

Senior Scholar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. And Research Professor, Center for Full Employment and Price Stability, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: Jak697
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Improving Global Economic Patterns of Growth and Employment


1
Improving Global Economic Patterns of Growth and
Employment
  • Jan Kregel
  • Senior Scholar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard
    College
  • And Research Professor, Center for Full
    Employment and Price Stability, University of
    Missouri Kansas City

2
Divergent Performance
  • While Growth Rates for Developing Countries Have
    Improved
  • Divergence has continued to increase
  • Yet, Employment Prospects have not improved
  • But, Employment is Key to
  • Mobilising Domestic Resources
  • Meeting the Internationally Agreed Development
    Goals
  • A More Active Employment Policy is Required
  • Such as a Guaranteed Jobs Programme or ELR

3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
Employment Performance has not been as Good
  • Problem of Employment Elasticities
  • Expansion in jobs relative to expansion in
    national output
  • Has been falling in most countries

9
Total Employment Elasticities Stable in East
Asia (youth rising) Rising in SE Asia (but youth
falling)Falling in South Asia (youth falling
sharply)Source The employment intensity of
growth Trends and macroeconomic determinants.
Steven Kapsos ILO 2005/12
10
Total Employment Elasticities Falling sharply in
Latin America (youth negative) Negative in the
Caribbean (youth sharply negative)Source The
employment intensity of growth Trends and
macroeconomic determinants Steven Kapsos ILO
2005/12
11
Total Employment Elasticities Falling sharply in
the Middle East (youth also falling and female
falling sharply) Falling in North Africa
(negative for youth, female falling
sharply)Falling in SS Africa (youth falling
sharply)Source The employment intensity of
growth Trends and macroeconomic determinants
Steven Kapsos ILO 2005/12
12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
This is not a New Problem
  • In 1977 Gerald Meier wrote
  • The labor absorption problem is now the central
    problem of development. In a group of 14 LDCs
    from the late 1950s to 1970, the total of known
    unemployed grew an average of more than 8 a year
    -- about three times the population growth rate.
  • The labor force of the developing market economy
    countries was approximately 700 million in 1975,
    but almost 300 million (some 40) were
    unemployed or underemployed. About 5 were
    openly unemployed -- "persons without a job and
    looking for work." About another 35, however,
    were "underemployed -- persons who are in
    employment of less than normal duration and who
    are seeking or would accept additional work" and"
    persons with a job yielding inadequate income".

19
And predicted that it would remain a central
problem
  • Not only is there already an extremely large pool
    of underemployed even worse, the projected
    growth in the labor force portends to exacerbate
    the employment problem as never before. It is
    expected that the growth of the labor force will
    accelerate -- to some 2.7 a year, in contrast
    with 2.0 a year in 1960-70. This would amount
    to a doubling of the labor force in LDCs in the
    last quarter of the century. It is striking that
    even a conservative estimate indicates that the
    LDCs will experience over 1970 -- 2000 an
    increasing labor force equivalent to double the
    size of the entire labor force that was in the
    developed countries as recently as 1950 -- some
    two centuries after the Industrial Revolution.
  • Gerald M. Meier, Employment, Trade and
    Development A Problem in International Policy
    Analysis, A.W. Sijthoff, Leiden, Institut
    Universitaire de Hautes Etudes Internationales,Gen
    eve, 1977.

20
Even After the Success of the First Development
Decade
  • Meier also noted that at the midpoint of the
    Second Development Decade, the World Bank's
    influential study of Redistribution with Growth
    begins by recognizing that
  • It is now clear that more than a decade of rapid
    growth in underdeveloped the countries has been
    of little or no benefit to perhaps a third of
    their population. Although the average per
    capita income of the Third World that has
    increased by 50 since 1960, this growth has been
    very unequally distributed among countries,
    regions within countries, and social -- economic
    groups. Paradoxically, while growth policies
    have succeeded beyond the expectations of the
    First Development Decade, the very idea of
    aggregate growth as a social objective has
    increasingly been called into question.

21
Nonetheless Emphasis Remained on a Lack of
Financial Resources
  • Constraints to development
  • Domestic savings gap
  • Scarcity of domestic resources
  • External resource requirements
  • How to Overcome constraints
  • Increase domestic savings
  • Foreign savings -- external resources
  • Official development assistance
  • Private aid and investment flows
  • Development Decades
  • One per cent of developed country GDP to be
    transferred to developing countries to achieve 5
    per cent growth of GDP
  • 0.3 per cent private flows, 0.7 per cent ODA

22
Net transfers of resources Becomes Measure of
Success
  • But for four UN Development Decades negative net
    transfers were the rule
  • 1960s,
  • lost decade of the 1980s,
  • financial crises of the 1990s
  • Private Flows have become dominant
  • Resource flows no longer subject to development
    needs, but to private incentives

23
(No Transcript)
24
No Fifth Development Decade Millennium
Declaration
  • Reduced emphasis on resource transfers
  • A directed aid strategy
  • Designed to meet time-bound, measurable Social
    Development Goals
  • Goals are symptoms of underdevelopment
  • Still requires external resources
  • 100 billion per year to 2015
  • What happens after 2015?

25
2002 Financing for Development Global
Development Partnership
  • Developing countries responsible for their own
    development
  • Primary source of development finance is
    Mobilising Domestic Resources
  • Developed countries to provide additional
    resources required to support sound national
    development strategies

26
What are the available domestic resources?
  • Most developing countries have abundant natural
    resources
  • But all have unemployed, underemployed or under
    qualified domestic labour
  • Increasing employment presents the greatest
    unexploited potential for mobilising domestic
    resources

27
Recognised in 2005 Summit Outcome
  • Employment
  • 47. We strongly support fair globalization and
    resolve to make the goals of full and productive
    employment and decent work for all, including for
    women and young people, a central objective of
    our relevant national and international policies
    as well as our national development strategies,
    including poverty reduction strategies, as part
    of our efforts to achieve the Millennium
    Development Goals.

28
Employment as an MDG
  • High-level segment of the 2006 substantive
    session of the Economic and Social Council
    Ministerial Declaration reinforced the 2005 World
    Summit position
  • Make full and productive employment and decent
    work for all, including for women and young
    people, a central objective of relevant national
    and international policies and national
    development strategies and to be part of efforts
    to achieve the internationally agreed development
    goals, including the Millennium Development
    Goals.

29
Full and Productive Employment
  • New Goal of full mobilization of domestic labour
    resources requires
  • suitable employment opportunities
  • provision of adequate basic education
  • vocational and occupational training to improve
    skills and productivity
  • unemployment benefit scheme that avoids moral
    hazard and fraud
  • migration policy - remittances

30
Traditional Approach undermines Domestic
Mobilisation
  • External resource transfers fill resource gap
  • Private flows and Official Aid create debt
    service obligations
  • Earnings of foreign currency needed to meet debt
    service
  • External surplus negative net resource transfer
  • BWI Structural Adjustment Program
  • Reduce domestic level of activity to free
    resources to meet debt service
  • Policy is Pro Cyclical
  • External surplus produced via fiscal surplus
  • Reduces domestic absorption and resource
    utilisation
  • Creates unemployment
  • Absence of Social Safety Net creates social
    marginalisation

31
(No Transcript)
32
Domestic Policy Space requires Fiscal Sovereignty
  • Is fiscal surplus sound resource mobilsation
    policy?
  • Government spending creates private sector assets
    in the banking system
  • Taxation creates private sector debts to the
    government that must be financed with those
    assets
  • If taxes exceed government spending the private
    sector is in net deficit, i.e. insolvent
  • If the private sector holds assets for other
    convenience purposes financial stability requires
    a government deficit over time equal to the
    private sectors demand for money balances

33
Domestic Policy Space requires Monetary
Sovereignty
  • Government spending increases unborrowed bank
    reserves
  • Excess reserves drive interbank rates to zero
  • To keep interest rates positive the government
    must borrow
  • As borrower of last resort it can fix the
    interest rate
  • Interest rates are thus not constrained by
    private sector willingness to buy government debt
    or the size of the deficit
  • The government does not have to borrow or issue
    debt in order to deficit spend
  • It follows that the government can always set the
    short term policy interest rate independently of
    the size of the deficit -- viz. Japan

34
How to mobilise domestic labour resources and
provide Counter Cyclical Policy?
  • Government takes responsibility to provide public
    sector employment to all those willing and able
    to work at or marginally below the prevailing
    informal sector wage
  • Restores Automatic Counter Cyclical Stabilisers
    to Aggregate Demand
  • Increases flexibility in the labour market by
    creating a ready supply of labour to meet demand
  • Provides training and skills to human capital

35
What does work mean?
  • Different according to level of development
  • Primary goals
  • Maintain and improve skill level of the labour
    force basic educational skills
  • Provide social safety net income maintenance
  • Provide social inclusion for the
    unemployed/unemployable social services
  • Meet the needs of female heads of households to
    combine work with family responsibilities
  • Improve the well-being of society useful public
    works

36
Is Such a Programme Feasible?
  • Argentine experience with Jefes programme
  • Education an integral part of the programme
    primary schooling to occupational training
  • Interministerial cooperation Labour, Eduction
    and Social Development ministries cooperated in
    providing educational programme
  • Promotes work practice and experience
  • Provides vocational skills
  • Improves marginal communities
  • Provided 500,000 workers to meet demand in the
    recovery

37
Is Jefes a relevant example?
  • Verified examples of success
  • Verified examples of fraud and corruption
  • Depends heavily on local government for
    implementation
  • Depends heavily on local initiative
  • Depends on Federal government for financing
  • Constrained by government budget goals but need
    not be given monetary and fiscal sovereignty that
    Argentina currently possesses

38
Jefes is not ELR
  • The Jefes programme was close to the ELR proposal
    but was an emergency response to the crisis
  • A suitably designed ELR can build on the success
    of Jefes
  • It can be designed to integrate the MDGs as well
    as the other Internationally Agreed Development
    Goals to be included in the National Development
    Strategies mandated at the 2005 Global Summit

39
ELR as an MDG programme
  • A suitably designed ELR programme to provide
    employment can also be designed to satisfy
  • MDG Goal 1 Eradicate Extreme Hunger and Poverty
  • MDG Goal2 Universal Primary Education
  • MDG Goal 3 Promote Gender Equality and Empower
    Women
  • MDG 4 and 5 Reduce Child Mortality and Improve
    Maternal Health
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com