Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia

This paper examines private sector job creation in Tunisia over the period 1996–2010 using a unique database containing information on all registered private enterprises, including self-employment. In spite of stable GDP growth, overall net job creation was disappointing and firm dynamics were sluggish. The firm size distribution has remained skewed towards small firms, because of stagnation of incumbents and entrants starting small, typically as one-person firms (i.e. self-employment). Churning is limited, especially amongst large firms, and very few firms manage to grow. Post-entry, small firms are the worst performers in terms of job creation, even if they survive. Moreover, the association between productivity, profitability and job creation is feeble, pointing towards weaknesses in the re-allocative process. Weak net job creation thus appears to be due to insufficient firm dynamism rather than excessive job destruction.

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Main Authors: Rijkers, Bob, Arouri, Hassen, Freund, Caroline, Nucifora, Antonio
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Elsevier 2014-12
Subjects:Firm dynamics, Job creation, Labor demand, Firm survival, SMEs, Small and medium enterprises,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20721
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spelling dig-okr-10986207212021-04-23T14:03:59Z Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia Rijkers, Bob Arouri, Hassen Freund, Caroline Nucifora, Antonio Firm dynamics Job creation Labor demand Firm survival SMEs Small and medium enterprises This paper examines private sector job creation in Tunisia over the period 1996–2010 using a unique database containing information on all registered private enterprises, including self-employment. In spite of stable GDP growth, overall net job creation was disappointing and firm dynamics were sluggish. The firm size distribution has remained skewed towards small firms, because of stagnation of incumbents and entrants starting small, typically as one-person firms (i.e. self-employment). Churning is limited, especially amongst large firms, and very few firms manage to grow. Post-entry, small firms are the worst performers in terms of job creation, even if they survive. Moreover, the association between productivity, profitability and job creation is feeble, pointing towards weaknesses in the re-allocative process. Weak net job creation thus appears to be due to insufficient firm dynamism rather than excessive job destruction. 2014-12-16T15:57:25Z 2014-12-16T15:57:25Z 2014-12 Journal Article Labour Economics 0927-5371 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20721 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Elsevier Publications & Research :: Journal Article Middle East and North Africa Tunisia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic Firm dynamics
Job creation
Labor demand
Firm survival
SMEs
Small and medium enterprises
Firm dynamics
Job creation
Labor demand
Firm survival
SMEs
Small and medium enterprises
spellingShingle Firm dynamics
Job creation
Labor demand
Firm survival
SMEs
Small and medium enterprises
Firm dynamics
Job creation
Labor demand
Firm survival
SMEs
Small and medium enterprises
Rijkers, Bob
Arouri, Hassen
Freund, Caroline
Nucifora, Antonio
Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
description This paper examines private sector job creation in Tunisia over the period 1996–2010 using a unique database containing information on all registered private enterprises, including self-employment. In spite of stable GDP growth, overall net job creation was disappointing and firm dynamics were sluggish. The firm size distribution has remained skewed towards small firms, because of stagnation of incumbents and entrants starting small, typically as one-person firms (i.e. self-employment). Churning is limited, especially amongst large firms, and very few firms manage to grow. Post-entry, small firms are the worst performers in terms of job creation, even if they survive. Moreover, the association between productivity, profitability and job creation is feeble, pointing towards weaknesses in the re-allocative process. Weak net job creation thus appears to be due to insufficient firm dynamism rather than excessive job destruction.
format Journal Article
topic_facet Firm dynamics
Job creation
Labor demand
Firm survival
SMEs
Small and medium enterprises
author Rijkers, Bob
Arouri, Hassen
Freund, Caroline
Nucifora, Antonio
author_facet Rijkers, Bob
Arouri, Hassen
Freund, Caroline
Nucifora, Antonio
author_sort Rijkers, Bob
title Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
title_short Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
title_full Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
title_fullStr Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed Which Firms Create the Most Jobs in Developing Countries? Evidence from Tunisia
title_sort which firms create the most jobs in developing countries? evidence from tunisia
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2014-12
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20721
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