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Growth in Vietnam, 2004-2012: Who Has Benefitted Most?. Reena Badiani -Magnusson World Bank and Loren Brandt University of Toronto. Objectives. L ook at growth in incomes and distributive outcomes between 2004-2012 using the VHLSS Several key questions:
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Growth in Vietnam, 2004-2012: Who Has Benefitted Most? ReenaBadiani-Magnusson World Bank and Loren Brandt University of Toronto
Objectives • Look at growth in incomes and distributive outcomes between 2004-2012 using the VHLSS • Several key questions: • Where is the growth in incomes coming from? • What is the link between this growth and distributive outcomes? • What role are age, educational background and location playing in sorting households into the most rapidly growing activities? • Who has been hurt by the post-IFC slowdown?
Preliminary Findings (focus on rural here) • Ongoing structural change in the economy • Shift from agricultural to non-agricultural • Declining role of family-run businesses, especially participation • Movement into the labor market • Important role of growth in wage earnings, but segmented • Urban: more highly skilled service sector jobs • Rural: less skilled jobs in manufacturing • Critical role of labor markets in intermediating flows between agricultural and non-agriculture, and the countryside and the cities • Rapid manufacturing sector wage growth playing equalizing role in countryside and helping to offset declining role of agriculture; agriculture should not be ignored however • Geography matters: • Sub-regional differences in rise of manufacturing; • Critical differences between North and South in growth in agriculture • Education increasingly important, especially at the bottom • Overall, modest rise in inequality: decline in fortunes at the bottom offset by rising middle
Average Income and Growth Rates by Activity, All Households
Average Income and Growth Rates by Activity Rural Households Only
Summary: Participation Regressions • Lower secondary education increases likelihood of working in manufacturing relative to primary or below • Males/females 15-29 much more likely in mfg • Market access matters for mfg • Paved road in commune • Distance to towns and cities
Final Thoughts • Need to sort through transitory versus permanent changes in distribution • Functioning of labor markets increasingly important; same is true for land • Can’t ignore agriculture and its role in the process of structural transformation • Lot more to do!