Academic literature on the topic 'Jobless Growth'

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Journal articles on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Marina, Akter. "Jobless Growth: Evidence from Bangladesh." International Journal of Multidisciplinary Informative Research and Review 1, no. 5 (2021): 220–31. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5555696.

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<strong>Abstract: </strong><em>This paper reflects a more comprehensive study of the relationship between economic growth and employment in Bangladesh. Its chief conclusion is that Bangladesh has achieved significant progress in the expansion of economic growth, which can&#39;t contribute enough to removing the unemployment problem. Still, it has a big challenge to create millions of jobs to face the unemployment problem.Some developing countries facing the problem of jobless growth. So it is an urgent issue to take the proper initiative to solve the problem. Though Bangladesh has achieved remarkable progress in economic growth, it could not play a vital role to create proper employment. Based on secondary data and the literature review, this paper reveals the fact of Jobless growth and discusses the possible solution to this problem in detail. The probable solution to the unemployment problems are training and development programs for the labor force, policy implications in the different sectors by the government, increase the female participation in the labor force, ensure women empowerment, apply job creation strategies, etc. The important findings indicate that by using a diverse strategy to job development in many areas of the economy, the unemployment problem may be mitigated. To create millions of jobs, appropriate measures should be executed, such as labor force development programs, the implementation of an effective job creation strategy, the encouragement of entrepreneurial development, and the formation of new companies. The Bangladesh government has taken the proper initiatives to remove the unemployment problem via different policies such as education and industrial policies that need to be supervised. Another opportunity is open for the young generation to engage them in freelancing by making them skilled through training and development as modern web and internet access to most of the country make enormous opportunities for young people.This paper finds some factors that can increase employment opportunities, such as advancement of technology, encouraging public-private partnership, entrepreneurship development.</em>
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Tejani, Sheba. "Jobless growth in India: an investigation." Cambridge Journal of Economics 40, no. 3 (2015): 843–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cje/bev025.

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Kumar Gupta Ajeet, Pawan. "Jobless Growth: A Painful Story of Employment Generation in India." International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) 12, no. 3 (2023): 339–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.21275/sr23307211858.

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Bahçe, Abdullah Burhan, and Öner Gümüş. "A Solution To Eradicate Jobless Growth: Meritocracy." Copernican Journal of Finance & Accounting 4, no. 1 (2015): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/cjfa.2015.001.

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HANUSCH, MAREK. "JOBLESS GROWTH? OKUN'S LAW IN EAST ASIA." Journal of International Commerce, Economics and Policy 04, no. 03 (2013): 1350014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1793993313500142.

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Was economic growth in East Asia jobless? An analysis of Okun's Law in eight countries between 1997 and 2011 suggests that it was not. However, there is considerable variation across countries. Generally, the effect of growth on employment magnifies in more flexible labor markets. Yet even under tight labor regulation, economic growth affects employment, especially in its composition. Agricultural employment moves counter-cyclically, as opposed to nonagricultural employment. The effect is particularly pronounced in periods of economic crisis, suggesting that agriculture serves as a shock-absorber for workers laid off in the industrial sector. Isolating nonagricultural employment reveals a stronger relationship between growth and job creation.
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Dawkins, Peter, Paul Gregg, and Rosanna Scutella. "The Growth of Jobless Households in Australia." Australian Economic Review 35, no. 2 (2002): 133–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8462.00231.

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Caballero, Ricardo J., and Mohamad L. Hammour. "Jobless growth: appropriability, factor substitution, and unemployment." Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 48 (June 1998): 51–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0167-2231(98)00016-5.

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Hall, Robert E. "Jobless growth: appropriability, factor substitution, and unemployment." Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 48 (June 1998): 95–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0167-2231(98)00017-7.

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Thomas, Jayan Jose. "Explaining the ‘jobless’ growth in Indian manufacturing." Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 18, no. 4 (2013): 673–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13547860.2013.827462.

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Palvia, Shailendra, and Vijay Vemuri. "Forecasts of jobless growth: Facts and myths." Journal of Information Technology Case and Application Research 18, no. 1 (2016): 4–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15228053.2016.1145621.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Togo, Eriko. "Export led growth and inter firm linkages : a theoretical exploration and an empirical study of the relationship between large export oriented and small domestically oriented enterprises in the apparel industry in Peru." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.270495.

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Lund, Jessica. "Does Sweden experience Jobless Growth? : An Empirical Study of the Relationsship between Unemployment and Growth in Sweden." Thesis, Jönköping University, JIBS, Economics, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-1191.

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<p>Abstract</p><p>This is unique study of import is of the greatest importance, since no studies of import</p><p>across regions have earlier been performed. Import is a driving force of innovations and</p><p>therefore most important for a stable growth. This master thesis is about interregional import,</p><p>as well as the strong spatial concentration of imports in the Swedish system of network.</p><p>Five hypothesises are presented in the last section of chapter two. The variables to be used</p><p>in the analysis are then divided into two main groups, before empirically tested in different</p><p>combinations of regression models.</p><p>The main conclusion of this thesis is a significant correlation between import, and the two</p><p>independent variables export and firm R&D, and its result goes in line with the theoretical</p><p>framework of this thesis, regional specialisation in import and export nodes.</p>
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Onaran, Özlem. "Jobless growth in the Central and Eastern European Countries. A country specific panel data analysis for the manufacturing industry." Inst. für Volkswirtschaftstheorie und -politik, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, 2007. http://epub.wu.ac.at/372/1/document.pdf.

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This paper estimates a labor demand equation based on the panel data of manufacturing industry in the Central and Eastern European Countries (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, and Romania) in order to test the effect of domestic factors (wages and output) and international factors (exports, imports, and FDI) on employment during the era of post -transition recovery. The findings indicate that employment does not respond to wages in more than half of the cases. The output elasticity of labor demand is mostly positive, but low, with a number of cases where employment is completely de-linked from output. An impressive speed of integration to the European economic sphere through FDI and international trade has not prevented job losses in the manufacturing industry. While there are very few cases of positive effects, insignificant effects of trade and FDI dominate the findings with some evidence of negative effects as well. (author's abstract)<br>Series: Department of Economics Working Paper Series
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ALESSANDRINI, MICHELE. "Essays on the Indian economy." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata", 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2108/1162.

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Tre decenni di crescita straordinaria hanno modificato profondamente l'economia dell'India, la cui struttura centralizzata, chiusa e basata sul settore agricolo appartiene ormai al passato. Negli anni ottanta, l' India era una delle economie più chiuse al mondo, ogni aspetto della produzione era controllato dal governo centrale tramite il sistema delle licenze, metà del reddito nazionale derivava dall'agricoltura e il " tasso di crescita Hindu" sembrava condannare il paese ad un persistente stato di arretratezza economica. Al contrario, l' India del 2009 è una nazione dove i servizi rappresentano più di metà del Pil, è il maggior esportatore mondiale di prodotti IT e di capitale umano altamente qualificato, rappresenta uno dei principali poli di attrazione di investimenti esteri e, nonostante la crisi finanziaria mondiale, il pattern di crescita dell'economia non manifesta alcun segnale allarmante di declino. Tuttavia, nonostante i risultati di successo, l' India è tuttora la nazione che ospita la maggioranza dei poveri e più di un terzo dei bambini malnutriti di tutto il mondo. Inoltre, la maggior parte della popolazione attiva è occupata in agricoltura e più della metà del reddito nazionale trae origine dall' economia sommersa. Se l' India sia in grado di trasformare l'attuale pattern di crescita economica in un processo di sviluppo economico rimane dunque una questione ancora aperta. La seguente tesi racchiude quattro ricerche separate e si inserisce nel dibattito riguardante i meccanismi e le conseguenze della crescita economica dellâ India. Lo scopo è quello di analizzare e valutare i cambiamenti dell'economia indiana avvenuti negli ultimi venticinque anni sotto quattro aspetti differenti: il processo di riforme, la distribuzione del reddito, la creazione di nuovi posti di lavoro e la specializzazione commerciale. Si scopre che l'India, se confrontata ad esempio con altre economie come Cina e Russia, ha implementato una strategia di crescita specifica e contestuale alle proprie caratteristiche economico-strutturali. Tale strategia si è contraddistinta per un graduale approccio alle riforme che hanno migliorato la performance economica del paese e stimolato il rapido passaggio dall' agricoltura ai servizi. Tuttavia, la terziarizzazione dell'economia indiana è stata accompagnata dal mancato sviluppo del tessuto industriale. La debolezza del settore manifatturiero, come dimostrato dal suo scarso contributo alla formazione del Pil, sembra essere la causa dei problemi strutturali dell' economia quali il divario di reddito fra gli stati dell' Unione, la " crescita senza occupazione" e il grado di specializzazione commerciale basato sui settori meno dinamici del commercio mondiale. I principali aspetti e risultati dei singoli capitoli possono essere così riassunti: - Il Capitolo 1 studia i differenti pattern di crescita di Cina, India e Russia considerando e comparando i processi di riforma che hanno favorito e accompagnato gli alti tassi di crescita. Analizzando le trasformazioni settoriali avvenute nelle tre economie, si dimostra che le strategie di crescita presentano specifiche caratteristiche in termini di gradualismo e strumenti di politica economica utilizzati. Vengono presi in considerazione gli effetti della crescita economica sulle disparità regionali in termini di reddito, valutando se la recente crescita del reddito nazionale sia stata omogeneamente distribuita all' interno dei tre paesi. Utilizzando la T di Theil e le matrici delle probabilità di transizione, si conclude che la disparità di reddito tra gli stati indiani e tra le province cinesi è aumentata nel corso del tempo. In particolare, vi è una crescente divergenza nei redditi fra le regioni più interne e prettamente agricole e quelle più ricche dislocate lungo la costa. Nel caso della Russia, il divario inter-regionale viene alimentato dalla presenza degli idrocarburi nelle regioni nell' ovest della Siberia. - Nel Capitolo 2 si analizza il processo di convergenza/divergenza tra gli stati dell' India. Dopo aver esaminato le principali riforme economiche implementate durante gli ultimi tre decenni nell'Unione Indiana, si conduce uno studio econometrico sulle determinanti della crescita economica nel quadro neoclassico del modello di Solow. Uno degli aspetti principali dello studio è l' applicazione di tecniche di econometria spaziale a complemento delle tecniche neoclassiche. Si controlla per due effetti spaziali distinti, l'effetto di distanza inter-regionale e l'effetto di condivisione di un confine comune. I risultati suggeriscono che la disparità tra regioni più ricche e più povere è costantemente aumentata durante gli anni ottanta e novanta. Più specificamente, si rileva che i vincitori sono gli stati che hanno beneficiato maggiormente delle riforme di liberalizzazione economica, grazie anche al vantaggio derivante dalla loro posizione geografica e alla presenza del settore dei servizi giù sviluppato. Le regioni che invece mostrano un'arretratezza economica più marcata sono risultate essere quelle più interne e prive dello sbocco al mare, altamente popolate, poco innovative e con la presenza predominante del settore agricolo. - Il Capitolo 3 prende in considerazione il problema della "jobless growth" (crescita senza occupazione) nel settore manifatturiero indiano. Nonostante l' incredibile performance economica degli ultimi venticinque anni, l'India è caratterizzata da u' alta divergenza fra il tasso di crescita dell'economia e il tasso di crescita dell'occupazione. L' elasticità dell' occupazione rispetto al Pil è diminuita nel tempo e la capacità dell' economia indiana di creare nuovi posti di lavoro sembra essere limitata. Come risultato, più del 60 per cento dei lavoratori indiani è ancora impiegata in agricoltura, mentre il 94 per cento della forza lavoro è occupata nell'economia sommersa. Questo studio analizza il fenomeno della " jobless growth" in India utilizzando un contesto Kaldoriano in cui i legami fra agricoltura e industria entrano nella domanda di lavoro tramite la ragione di scambio fra i due settori. Inoltre, si considera il ruolo del settore informale sulla crescita dell' occupazione formale. Utilizzando dati panel sul settore manifatturiero formale dei 15 maggiori stati indiani tra il 1980 e il 2004, le stime System-GMM mostrano che gli stati con una più alta domanda di prodotti industriali proveniente dall'agricoltura hanno avuto una più alta crescita dell' occupazione. In aggiunta, in quegli stati in cui il peso del settore informale è cresciuto nel tempo, il problema della "jobless growth" è risultato essere maggiore. - Infine, nel Capitolo 4, si studia l' evoluzione della specializzazione commerciale nel settore manifatturiero indiano, utilizzando dati sul commercio internazionale a partire dal 1985. I settori con un più basso grado di contenuto tecnologico dominano le categorie di prodotto in cui l'India è specializzata. Al contrario, nei settori ad alto contenuto tecnologico, l' India mostra un' alta dipendenza dalle importazioni. Tuttavia, l'India ha mostrato miglioramenti nel grado di specializzazione in alcuni fra i più dinamici settori in termini di domanda mondiale.<br>Three decades of extraordinary growth have drastically modified the economy of India, and its centralized, closed and agriculture-based structure definitely belongs to the past. In the early 1980s, India was one of the most closed countries in the world, every step of production was under the license system governed by the central state, half of the national income derived from agriculture and the " Hindu rate of growth" seemed to condemn the economy to a persisting level of backwardness. By contrast, India in 2009 is a country where more than half of GDP comes from service activities, it is the world major exporter of IT products and highly-skilled human capital, it represents one of the most attractive destinations for global companiesâ investments and, despite the global financial crisis, the pace of growth of the economy does not display any alarming signal of decline. Nevertheless, despite these successful results, India is the country where the majority of worldâ s poor lives, accounting for more than one third of the worldwide malnourished children. Moreover, the largest part of Indian working population finds employment in rural areas and more than half of the national income comes from unregistered activities. The question about whether India will be able to transform its economic growth pattern into an economic development process is therefore still open. This thesis consists of four separate essays and is a contribution to the debate concerning the mechanisms and the consequences of the Indian growth experience. It investigates and evaluates the changing Indian economy in the last two and a half decades under four main aspects: the process of reforms, the distribution of income, the creation of new jobs and the specialization of trade. It is found that India implemented a context-specific growth strategy, especially if compared to other economies like China or Russia. This strategy was characterised by a gradual approach to economic and policy reforms that enhanced the performance of the country and stimulated the rapid shift from agriculture to services. However, the tertiarization of India occurred at the expenses of the process of industrialization. The weakness of the manufacturing sector, as shown by its limited contribution to GDP formation, appears to explain a number of structural problems of the economy. In fact, it is associated with a widening of the income gap between landlocked and coastal states of the Union; it is responsible for the jobless growth dilemma; and it constrains the degree of Indian trade specialization to the less dynamic sectors of world trade. The contents and the main findings of each chapter can be summarized as follows: - Chapter 1 studies the different patterns of growth of China, India and Russia by exploring and comparing the processes of reforms that have generated and accompanied their high and sustained rates of growth. Focusing on the sector transformations involved into the three economies, I show that the growth strategies implemented present specific characteristics in terms of gradualism and policy choices. I explore the effects of economic growth on regional income disparities and the extent to which the recent increase in prosperity has been homogeneously distributed within each of the three giants. The analysis makes use of Theil' s T statistics and transition probability matrices to reveal that income disparities within the Indian states and Chinese provinces have increased. In particular, landlocked and rural areas are in general still far from reducing the income gap from coastal and richest regions. In the case of Russia, the great divide is fuelled by the presence of hydrocarbons resources, which tend to be concentrated in West Siberia. - Chapter 2 investigates the process of convergence/divergence across Indian states. After surveying the main economic reforms implemented during the last decades in the Indian Union, I conduct an econometric study of the determinants of economic growth in the neoclassical frame of the Solow model. One of the main novel aspects of the convergence analysis is the attention paid to the spatial pattern of growth across Indian states. Making use of spatial econometric tools, I control for two different kinds of spatial interaction: distance and neighbourhood. The results suggest that the gap between poor and rich states has constantly increased during the 1980s and the 1990s. Specifically, winners were those states that benefited the most from the recent process of reform and liberalization, thanks also to their geographical advantage and to the presence of a developed service sector. Losers were instead the landlocked and highly populated states with a predominant agricultural sector and a low level of innovation. - Chapter 3 investigates the jobless growth scenario affecting Indian manufacturing. Despite the incredible economic performance in the last twenty-five years, India maintains a high discrepancy between the rate of growth of the economy and the rate of growth of employment. Labour elasticity to output has decreased over time and the capability of the Indian economy to generate employment seems to be limited. As a result, more than 60% of Indian workers are still employed in agriculture and 94% of total labour force can be found in the unregistered segment of the economy. This paper analyzes the jobless growth problem in India in terms of a Kaldorian framework where the linkages between agriculture and industry enter labour demand through the changes in the terms of trade between the two sectors. Moreover, I investigate the role of the unorganized sector in influencing the growth of the registered employment. Using a dynamic panel dataset on registered manufacturing from the 15 major Indian states over the period 1980-2004, System-GMM estimates show that states with a higher growth of demand for industrial goods originating from agriculture also exhibit a higher growth of employment. In addition, in those states where the weight of the unregistered manufacturing has risen over time, the jobless growth problem has worsened. - Finally, Chapter 4 examines the pattern of international trade specialization in Indian manufacturing since the mid-1980s by using data on trade flows. Low-technology sectors still dominate the categories for which India exhibits the largest degree of trade specialization. By contrast, high-technology sectors are prevalent among the categories for which India is import-dependent. Significantly, India has experienced an improvement in the degree of specialization in some of the most dynamic sectors of world trade.
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Ayhan, H. sinem. "A Multi-pronged Approach To Labor Market Flexibility: A Survey On The Turkish Context." Master's thesis, METU, 2008. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/2/12609513/index.pdf.

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Turkish labor market has been experiencing low employment performance over the last two decades. This pessimistic picture has become more striking after the crisis in 2001. While output growth has presented a rapid recovery, unemployment could not record such an improvement and has remained around 10 % since then. This fact has introduced a new phenomenon to Turkey called &ldquo<br>jobless growth&rdquo<br>. As a solution to the bottlenecks in the labor market, the concept of &ldquo<br>flexibility&rdquo<br>has been more frequently pronounced by policy makers and academicians at both national and international level. In the light of flexibility-based arguments, this thesis takes an impulse from the basic assertion of the neoclassical theory that it is the labor market rigidities that are mainly responsible for high unemployment/low employment performance. Accordingly, the aim of the thesis is to analyze labor market flexibility with a particular focus on the Turkish context. The discussions conducted throughout the thesis are based on the question<br>whether Turkish labor market actually includes such considerable rigidities constituting impediment for employment creation, as suggested by neoclassical arguments. The thesis starts with a review of main characteristics of the labor market in terms of demographic trends, labor force participation, employment and unemployment. Secondly, labor market flexibility is analyzed through two main indicators: labor cost flexibility and production function flexibility<br>and these two indicators are divided into six sub indicators. The flexibility indicators covered by the thesis are investigated individually, without an aim of aggregating them into a single indicator. The research involves quantitative findings based on available data and a qualitative survey with reference to related legislation.
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Books on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Caballero, Ricardo J. Jobless growth: Appropriability, factor-substitution, and unemployment. Dept. of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1997.

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Mohan, N. Chandra. Unemployment in an era of jobless growth. Institute for Studies in Industrial Development, 2014.

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Caballero, Ricardo J. Jobless growth: Appropriability, factor substitution, and unemployment. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1997.

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South Asia Economic Focus: Jobless Growth. Washington, DC: World Bank, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1284-2.

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Krohn-Hansen, Christian. Jobless Growth in the Dominican Republic. Stanford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781503631571.

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Hanusch, Marek. Jobless Growth? Okun's Law in East Asia. The World Bank, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-6156.

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An open services regime recipe for jobless growth? Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, 2008.

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Republic of Congo - Employment and Growth Study : From Jobless to Inclusive Growth. World Bank, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1596/2815.

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Verma, Rubina. Structural Transformation and Jobless Growth in the Indian Economy. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199734580.013.0010.

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Krohn-Hansen, Christian. Jobless Growth in the Dominican Republic: Disorganization, Precarity, and Livelihoods. Stanford University Press, 2022.

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Book chapters on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Khare, Mona, and Sonam Arora. "Jobless growth in India." In Higher Education, Employment, and Economic Development in India. Routledge India, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003329862-12.

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Borooah, Vani K. "Jobless Men and Working Women." In Growth, Unemployment, Distribution and Government. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230373006_8.

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Kathuria, Rajat, and Ujjwal Krishna. "The crisis of jobless growth in India." In India Higher Education Report 2020. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003158349-3.

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Abraham, Vinoj. "The Dynamic Nature of Jobless Growth in India." In Globalization, Labour Market Institutions, Processes and Policies in India. Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7111-0_18.

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Chandrasekhar, S. "Urbanisation in a Decade of Near Jobless Growth." In Exploring Urban Change in South Asia. Springer India, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-3616-0_5.

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Featherstone, Kevin, and Dimitris Papadimitriou. "The Puzzle of Jobless Growth: The Challenge of Reforming the Greek Labour Market." In The Limits of Europeanization. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230582378_5.

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van der Westhuizen, Thea. "Introduction to Youth Entrepreneurship." In Practical Tools for Youth Entrepreneurs. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-44362-6_1.

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AbstractSouth Africa is facing its biggest crisis ever in relation to youth unemployment. Under the expanded definition of total national unemployment, which includes discouraged job seekers, the rate rose to a record of 43.2% in the first quarter of 2021 from 42.6% in the previous quarter. Underscoring the gravity of the situation, the youth’s jobless rate based on the expanded definition now stands at 74.7%, which means that only one in four school leavers who are 24 or younger have a job in South Africa. A link between youth unemployment and low economic development is evident in South Africa, and the low economic growth influences the total labour market. It is important to examine the effects that unemployment has on youth development because unemployed youths are unable to gain valuable entrepreneurial skills. Entrepreneurship is often seen as a strategy to improve youth unemployment, but by no means can it be seen as a save-it-all strategy for national social-economic development. Attempting to investigate possible support strategies for youth entrepreneurs, the SHAPE ecosystem for youth entrepreneurs was first theoretically created and then practically applied over time.
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Keane, John, and John Owens. "Populist Conservatism and jobless growth." In After Full Employment. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429398216-7.

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Türcke, Christoph. "Informeller Sektor und Jobless Growth." In Digitale Gefolgschaft. Verlag C.H.BECK oHG, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.17104/9783406731822-22.

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"6 Indonesian Industrialisation: Jobless Growth?" In Employment, Living Standards and Poverty in Contemporary Indonesia. ISEAS Publishing, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814345132-011.

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Conference papers on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Mukherjee, Soumyatanu. "LIBERALISATION, REAL WAGES AND JOBLESS GROWTH: GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM SYNTHESIS." In 2nd International Scientific Conference - Economics and Management: How to Cope With Disrupted Times. Association of Economists and Managers of the Balkans, Belgrade, Serbia; Faculty of Management Koper, Slovenia; Doba Business School - Maribor, Slovenia; Integrated Business Faculty - Skopje, Macedonia; Faculty of Management - Zajecar, Serbia, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31410/eman.2018.942.

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Reports on the topic "Jobless Growth"

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Caballero, Ricardo, and Mohamad Hammour. Jobless Growth: Appropriability, Factor Substitution, and Unemployment. National Bureau of Economic Research, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w6221.

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