1 / 19

Aboriginal Labour Force Participation in Canada: Consideration of a Broader Definition of Capital

Aboriginal Labour Force Participation in Canada: Consideration of a Broader Definition of Capital. Laura Lamb & Belayet Hossain Thompson Rivers University Kamloops, BC Canada. Background. Aboriginal Canadians live at a lower level of economic development than non-Aboriginal Canadians.

minty
Download Presentation

Aboriginal Labour Force Participation in Canada: Consideration of a Broader Definition of Capital

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aboriginal Labour Force Participation in Canada: Consideration of a Broader Definition of Capital Laura Lamb & Belayet Hossain Thompson Rivers University Kamloops, BC Canada

  2. Background • Aboriginal Canadians live at a lower level of economic development than non-Aboriginal Canadians. • labour force status is consistently considered to be a critical factor.

  3. Importance of employment • Employment is one of the most fundamental ways people participate in society, and the basis of self-respect and autonomy (Mendelson, 2004) • Employment is incorporated in many measures of well-being. (CWB Beavon & Cooke, 2003)

  4. Research Objective • Identify the socio-economic and demographic determinants of the labour force status of Aboriginal Canadians • Broader definition of capital • Health status • Social capital

  5. Role of Health Status • A component of human capital • Health status → labour market productivity →labour force participation • Past research on health and employment • Stephens (2010), Latif (2006)

  6. Role of Social Capital • Networks and social relations are instrumental for labour market success (Woolcock, 2001) • Past research on social capital and employment • White et al.(2003), Matthews et al. (2009), Grenier & Xue (2009)

  7. Hypothesis • Aboriginal Canadians with higher levels of human capital, as indicated by educational attainment and health status, and a high level of social capital are more likely to have full-time employment and less likely to not be in the labour force.

  8. Methodology • 2006 Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS), Statistics Canada • 18,165 observations (age 20+) • Multinomial probit model • Dependent variable: employment status • NILF not in labour force • UE unemployed • PT part time employment • FT full time employment

  9. Independent variables Human Capital education, health status Social Capital Socio-demographic gender, age, marital status, children, region, Aboriginal status, income support

  10. Descriptive Statistics

  11. Frequency distributions by health status Good/Excellent Health Fair/Poor Health

  12. Frequencies distributions by social capital Strong Social Capital Weak Social Capital

  13. Multinomial Probit – predicted probabilities

  14. Multinomial Probit – predicted probabilities

  15. Summary of results • Completion of post-secondary (university or non-university) is important for attaining full-time employment. • Good health has the largest impact on full-time employment. • Strong social capital has a significant impact on the probability of attaining full-time employment.

  16. Summary of results • Predicted probability of being employed full-time is positively affected by • Male gender • Age 25-54 • Income support • Predicted probability of being employed full-time is negatively affected by • >2 children • Rural residence • Registered Indian status

  17. Summary of results • The likelihood of not being in the labour force decreases with • level of education • strong social capital • good health • The likelihood of being unemployed decreases with • level of education • strong social capital

  18. Policy implications • Results suggest greater recognition for the role of good health & social capital in policies developed to improve labour force participation of Aboriginal Canadians.

  19. Future research • Results suggest that future research in this area may want to include a broader definition of capital to include social capital and health. • Examine role of capital with multiple variables to capture full impact of networks and relationships. • Include other variables such as parental education and intermarriage.

More Related