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Coping with Crises: Policies to protect workers. The World Bank PRMPR. Labor market impacts of the crisis. During 2009, the economic crisis turned into a jobs crisis In the developed countries, pool of unemployed estimated to have increased by 15 million in 2009 (ILO, 2010)
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Coping with Crises: Policies to protect workers The World Bank PRMPR
Labor market impacts of the crisis • During 2009, the economic crisis turned into a jobs crisis • In the developed countries, pool of unemployed estimated to have increased by 15 million in 2009 (ILO, 2010) • In developing countries: primarily lower earnings because of lower hours worked, and a probable shift towards low productivity, low pay jobs and more underemployment (Khanna, Newhouse and Paci, 2010) • Labor is the main channel through which shocks are transmitted to households • Especially in poorer countries • Especially for the poor in those countries
Why policy interventions? • Short-term responses to crisis may have important long term effects (Paci, Revenga and Rijkers, 2010) • Households coping responses • Persistence (low pay traps and labor market scarring) • Firm creation and destruction • Affecting the most vulnerable • Optimal responses differ depending on channel • e.g. unemployment insurance (reductions in employment) vs. cash transfers (reductions in wages) • Existing policies and institutions have an impact on adjustment patterns (Paci, Khanna and Newhouse, 2010)
Why policy interventions? Household level effects: Damage to human and physical capital • Household coping responses can have negative long-term effects on welfare: • Take children out of school • Spend less on health and nutrition • Sell productive assets e.g. livestock • Loss of jobs destroy firm-worker human capital gains • Unemployment persistence • Low pay traps and labor market scarring
Why policy interventions? Firm level effects: Creative or destructive destruction? • Schumpeterian creative destruction – resources reallocate from inefficient to more efficient firms • But assumes perfect markets • Risk of excessive cleansing • Efficient production arrangements are more vulnerable to credit constraints • Innovative firms also more vulnerable • Jobs created in crisis are less productive, pay less, last less • Risk of excess churning
Why policy interventions? Equity considerations • A crisis that started in the OECD countries but quickly spread to developing countries because of • Lower exports demand • Credit crunch • Lower remittances and less new migration • Within developing countries, past crises suggest rapid contagion from the directly hit sectors to other parts of the economy and ultimately affecting the most vulnerable • Mexico: rural farm workers saw a 17% income reduction • Indonesia: earnings fell by 40% across the board
What history tells us about policy • Custom tailor policy responses. These should depend on • Type of shock and adjustment mechanisms • Fiscal space • Capacity and political economy constraints • Comprehensive policy packages beat piecemeal interventions • Synergy and complimentarity • Easier to expand existing programs than start from scratch during crisis • “on the run” policies have weak targeting • difficulties associated with implementing incentive compatible packages from scratch
Constraints and trade-offs • Policy constraints • Labor market information lacking • Fiscal space limited • Institutional and political economy constraints • Policy trade-offs • Short-term assistance vs. long-term structural reform • Financial sector, labor market regulation • Support those most immediately affected or protect the most vulnerable and chronically poor • Rapid contagion of crisis
Policy responses 1. Protect employment directly • Tax holidays, wage subsidies • Constraint: high costs per job created and political economy constraints (opposition from unions) • Self-employment assistance programs • more promising when targeted at particular groups such as women and older individuals 2. Addressing labor market imperfections in the credit market • Avoiding a credit crunch • Microfinance schemes • In Indonesia, micro-finance institutions (MFIs) appear to have been very resilient to the East Asian crisis
Policy responses 3. Social protection of those hit by the crisis • Extended unemployment benefits • requires time and substantial fiscal and institutional capacity to implement, monitor and target • Public works • most common response to the current crisis (ILO, 2009) • Targeted cash transfers • IF labor market adjustments take place through earnings rather than the quantity of jobs THEN: relatively low administrative costs and do not distort prices. • In contrast, they cannot rely on self-selection, and political pressures may potentially make a scaling back of temporary programs impossible once the crisis is over. 4. Promoting human capital accumulation and employability • Conditional cash transfers • But where cash transfer programs are not in place, conditional schemes take longer to implement than unconditional schemes; poorly designed schemes can exclude the most vulnerable • Training programs • Can help enhance worker productivity
Prepare, preserve, expand policies that work • Luck favors the prepared • Designing, implementing and evaluating sound policies ex ante: • Prudent fiscal management -> resources for response • Reliable labor market information systems -> make informed choices, monitor and evaluate • Flexible labor market regulations • Well functioning credit markets • SOUND SAFETY NET SYSTEMS -> can be expanded • Hopefully NOW we’ll see: increased global effort to put in place efficient policy systems and high frequency data to monitor labor market outcomes.
Labor market dynamics in the current crisis • Higher impact on earnings than on job creation • Increasing underemployment and shift into low productivity sectors which offer less work and lower earnings • Lower earnings in ‘formal’ and higher paying sectors • Increased labor supply in informal, lower paying sectors -> lowering earnings further
In Selected MICs Hours Worked and Earnings Played a Major Role
The fall in productivity may be the result of a sectoral shift in employment Growth in employment and change in growth of employment across sectors
Policy implications • How to protect earnings (not only jobs)? • Preliminary evidence suggests that effective policy packages should include earnings and income support. • Responses in European OECD countries include • partial unemployment insurance, • expanding cash transfers to poor workers • temporary wage subsidies. • These may be priority interventions in those countries where hours and earnings adjustments dominated.