The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka

Although Sri Lanka has made significant progress in social and economic development over the past decade, the Northern and Eastern provinces that faced the brunt of the decades-long conflict remain disproportionately poor. To understand the labor market dimensions of poverty in these regions, this paper examines a range of job-related indicators, using data from 2011 to 2015. The overall labor force participation rate in these provinces is significantly lower than in the rest of the country. Much of the difference can be attributed to adult women, although the participation rates of youth and those with lower educational attainment are also low. The distribution of wages for male and female wage workers in these provinces is similar to that in other parts of the country. The pattern of low employment rates and comparable wages is consistent with a combination of low demand for labor and greater reluctance to work in these regions, which each depress employment but have counteracting effects on equilibrium wages. Skills are an issue, as adults in these provinces tend to score lower on literacy tests and have lower self-reported skills in reading, writing, and numeracy. Households in these provinces have less access to formal finance, which may also contribute to a lack of self-employment opportunities.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Newhouse, David, Silwal, Ani Rudra
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-02
Subjects:CONFLICT, JOB CREATION, JOBS, POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION, LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, EMPLOYMENT, LABOR MARKET, WAGE GAP, INEQUALITY, GENDER, INFORMALITY, SELF-EMPLOYMENT, SKILLS DEVELOPMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/443541519651773814/The-state-of-jobs-in-post-conflict-areas-of-Sri-Lanka
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29415
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spelling dig-okr-10986294152024-06-23T07:52:11Z The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka Newhouse, David Silwal, Ani Rudra CONFLICT JOB CREATION JOBS POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION EMPLOYMENT LABOR MARKET WAGE GAP INEQUALITY GENDER INFORMALITY SELF-EMPLOYMENT SKILLS DEVELOPMENT Although Sri Lanka has made significant progress in social and economic development over the past decade, the Northern and Eastern provinces that faced the brunt of the decades-long conflict remain disproportionately poor. To understand the labor market dimensions of poverty in these regions, this paper examines a range of job-related indicators, using data from 2011 to 2015. The overall labor force participation rate in these provinces is significantly lower than in the rest of the country. Much of the difference can be attributed to adult women, although the participation rates of youth and those with lower educational attainment are also low. The distribution of wages for male and female wage workers in these provinces is similar to that in other parts of the country. The pattern of low employment rates and comparable wages is consistent with a combination of low demand for labor and greater reluctance to work in these regions, which each depress employment but have counteracting effects on equilibrium wages. Skills are an issue, as adults in these provinces tend to score lower on literacy tests and have lower self-reported skills in reading, writing, and numeracy. Households in these provinces have less access to formal finance, which may also contribute to a lack of self-employment opportunities. 2018-02-28T23:15:07Z 2018-02-28T23:15:07Z 2018-02 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/443541519651773814/The-state-of-jobs-in-post-conflict-areas-of-Sri-Lanka https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29415 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8355 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
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libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic CONFLICT
JOB CREATION
JOBS
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR MARKET
WAGE GAP
INEQUALITY
GENDER
INFORMALITY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
CONFLICT
JOB CREATION
JOBS
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR MARKET
WAGE GAP
INEQUALITY
GENDER
INFORMALITY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle CONFLICT
JOB CREATION
JOBS
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR MARKET
WAGE GAP
INEQUALITY
GENDER
INFORMALITY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
CONFLICT
JOB CREATION
JOBS
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR MARKET
WAGE GAP
INEQUALITY
GENDER
INFORMALITY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
Newhouse, David
Silwal, Ani Rudra
The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
description Although Sri Lanka has made significant progress in social and economic development over the past decade, the Northern and Eastern provinces that faced the brunt of the decades-long conflict remain disproportionately poor. To understand the labor market dimensions of poverty in these regions, this paper examines a range of job-related indicators, using data from 2011 to 2015. The overall labor force participation rate in these provinces is significantly lower than in the rest of the country. Much of the difference can be attributed to adult women, although the participation rates of youth and those with lower educational attainment are also low. The distribution of wages for male and female wage workers in these provinces is similar to that in other parts of the country. The pattern of low employment rates and comparable wages is consistent with a combination of low demand for labor and greater reluctance to work in these regions, which each depress employment but have counteracting effects on equilibrium wages. Skills are an issue, as adults in these provinces tend to score lower on literacy tests and have lower self-reported skills in reading, writing, and numeracy. Households in these provinces have less access to formal finance, which may also contribute to a lack of self-employment opportunities.
format Working Paper
topic_facet CONFLICT
JOB CREATION
JOBS
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR MARKET
WAGE GAP
INEQUALITY
GENDER
INFORMALITY
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
author Newhouse, David
Silwal, Ani Rudra
author_facet Newhouse, David
Silwal, Ani Rudra
author_sort Newhouse, David
title The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
title_short The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
title_full The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
title_fullStr The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed The State of Jobs in Post-Conflict Areas of Sri Lanka
title_sort state of jobs in post-conflict areas of sri lanka
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/443541519651773814/The-state-of-jobs-in-post-conflict-areas-of-Sri-Lanka
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29415
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