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Asian growth rates rise but employment problems deepen
By Nick Beams
9 May 2006
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Despite relatively high levels of growth, Asia is heading for
an employment crisis with far-reaching social and political consequences.
That is the conclusion which emerges from a new book on the regions
labour markets published by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) last
month.
The outlines of an Asian employment crisis are already
taking shape, the ADBs chief economist Ifzal Ali said
at the book launch. Strong economic growth alone will not
solve the problem. Even in countries that have achieved relatively
high growth rates of output, employment growth has been disappointing.
The ADB study notes that, although the region has made some
advances in the reduction of poverty over the past two decades,
some 1.9 billion people still live on less than $2 a day, either
unable to find work or earning too little from the employment
they do obtain.
The bank pointed to a huge global oversupply of labour
resulting from the integration of China, India and Russia into
the world economy.
Asias success will sooner or later be eclipsed
by the pressures of a huge reserve army of unemployed
and underemployed workers who are constantly driven to seek out
employment at sub-standard wages in order to survive, Ali
said.
The potential of developing Asian economies is widely
recognised. But unless Asian governments make job creation a central
national objective backed by time-bound, feasible, credible and
measurable policies, the region may well remain plagued by huge
unemployment, underemployment and povertyand all the challenges
they create.
One of the most significant findings of the ADB study is that
the percentage increase in employment during the 1990s for every
percentage point growth in the gross domestic product (GDP) was
lower than in the previous decade. The largest fall was in Chinathe
worlds fastest growing economywhere growth of 3 percent
in the 1980s produced a 1 percent increase in employment, while
a growth rate of almost 8 percent was needed to achieve the same
result in the 1990s.
The problem appears to be worsening. In 2006, it is estimated
that about 25 million new urban jobs need to be created in China
to accommodate new entrants to the labour market, rural migrants
and workers laid off from state enterprises. But according to
the latest estimates, only 11 million new jobs will be generated.
The ADB has found what it calls disappointing results
so far as income inequality is concerned. In China, the Gini index,
which provides a statistical measure of inequality, rose by 13
percentage points between 1981 and 2000. Inequality has also increased
in India, both between urban and rural areas and within urban
areas.
The ADB study also found that employment in the so-called informal
sector, where productivity is very low and little capital is employed,
is either on the rise or remains persistent. In India, where
per capita GDP growth was close to 5 percent between 1993 and
1999, the share of the informal sector in non-agricultural employment
increased from 80.5 percent to 83.2 percent.
Informal employment was also on the increase in China and Vietnam
as a result of layoffs in state-owned enterprises and an increase
in rural-urban migration. The study also found a dramatic
rise in informal employment in Indonesia following the Asian financial
crisis of 1997-98, with increases also recorded in the Philippines
and Thailand.
Moreover, the nature of employment is also changing. While
previously formal sector employment was synonymous with regular
contracts, which among other things offered considerable job security,
this is increasingly not the case. A survey of formal sector establishments
in the Philippines shows that the proportion of nonregular workers
in total employment increased from about 20 percent in 1991 to
about 28 percent in 1997.
In examining the causes of these phenomena, the study noted
that the increase in the effective size of the global labour force
had not been accompanied by a surge in capital for investment.
At the same time, while the relative labour abundance of developing
countries would suggest the use of more labour-intensive methods
in the formal industry and service sectors, this was not the case
and the formal sectors of developing countries are not very
different from those of industrial countries in terms of capital
intensity.
A study conducted at an Indian motorbike and scooter factory,
for example, found that while 810 workers produced 244,000 units
two years ago, after the introduction of greater automation and
changes on the shop floor, the factory is turning out nearly three
times as many motorbikes with just 90 more workers. As executives
at leading manufacturing plants explain, the introduction of labour-saving
techniques is deemed essential for achieving international
competitiveness.
The ADB study called for significant increases
in the demand for labour in the formal sector. Not only did aggregate
production have to increase but this expansion had to be labour
intensive. But policy prescriptions to make this happen are another
question. After calling for policies to promote diversification
of production activities into new areas, facilitate restructuring
of existing activities, and foster coordination between public
and private entities, it acknowledged that, while such measures
might alleviate some of the problems associated with the adoption
of new technologies and the intense competition between firms,
they would not eliminate them. In other words, it is quite
likely that unemployment driven by the adoption of new technologies
and heightened competition among firms will continue to be serious
problems.
Just how serious was underlined in a recent speech by the head
of one of Indias leading industrial and engineering firms.
Delivering the Hatfield lecture at Cornell University last month,
Ratan Tata, the head of the Tata Group, pointed out that of Indias
billion plus population 20 percent are under the age of 20. By
the year 2040 the country would have the worlds largest
working-age population, surpassing even that of China.
These young Indians want a place in the sun, an education,
a job, the kind of life they know exists from television,
he said. Will there be jobs for them? If not, he warned,
the country may see the makings of a revolution.
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