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Exporters, Importers and Employment: Firm-Level Evidence from Africa

Exporters, Importers and Employment: Firm-Level Evidence from Africa This article studies the relationship between firms’ export and import status and the quantity and types of employment they offer, using firm-level data from 47 African countries for the period 2006–14. The article also analyses how the quality of policies at the country-level can relate to the difference between exporters and non-exporters, and importers and non-importers. This article shows that both exporters and importers employ, on average, more full-time permanent workers than their respective non-trading counterparts, even after controlling for a wide range of firm-level characteristics. This employment premium is larger in countries with better quality of infrastructure. In addition, importers employ higher shares of non-production workers compared to non-importers. In addition, both exporters and importers are characterised by higher shares of female employment than their non-trading counterparts. Successful gender policies are positively associated with the female employment premium of trading firms. This article also finds that there is a larger proportion of temporary workers amongst the exporters’ workforce compared to non-exporters, but a better developed rural sector reduces this difference in the use of temporary manpower. The results presented in this article suggest that the quality of policies impacts the extent to which trading firms are able to generate decent job opportunities in Africa. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Indian Journal of Labour Economics Springer Journals

Exporters, Importers and Employment: Firm-Level Evidence from Africa

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References (40)

Publisher
Springer Journals
Copyright
Copyright © 2017 by Indian Society of Labour Economics
Subject
Economics; Labor Economics; Industrial Organization; Development Economics
ISSN
0971-7927
eISSN
0019-5308
DOI
10.1007/s41027-017-0069-0
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This article studies the relationship between firms’ export and import status and the quantity and types of employment they offer, using firm-level data from 47 African countries for the period 2006–14. The article also analyses how the quality of policies at the country-level can relate to the difference between exporters and non-exporters, and importers and non-importers. This article shows that both exporters and importers employ, on average, more full-time permanent workers than their respective non-trading counterparts, even after controlling for a wide range of firm-level characteristics. This employment premium is larger in countries with better quality of infrastructure. In addition, importers employ higher shares of non-production workers compared to non-importers. In addition, both exporters and importers are characterised by higher shares of female employment than their non-trading counterparts. Successful gender policies are positively associated with the female employment premium of trading firms. This article also finds that there is a larger proportion of temporary workers amongst the exporters’ workforce compared to non-exporters, but a better developed rural sector reduces this difference in the use of temporary manpower. The results presented in this article suggest that the quality of policies impacts the extent to which trading firms are able to generate decent job opportunities in Africa.

Journal

The Indian Journal of Labour EconomicsSpringer Journals

Published: Nov 15, 2017

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