The Impact of the Investment Climate on Employment Growth : Does Sub-Saharan Africa Mirror Other Low-Income Regions?

Using survey data from 86,000 enterprises in 104 countries, including 17,000 enterprises in 31 Sub-Saharan African countries, this paper finds that average enterprise-level employment growth rates are remarkably similar across regions. This is true despite significant differences in the quality of the investment climate in which these enterprises operate. Objective measures of investment climate conditions (including the number of outages, the share of firms with bank loans, and others) indicate that conditions are most challenging within Sub-Saharan Africa, as well as for smaller enterprises. However, enterprises employment in Sub-Saharan Africa is less sensitive to changes in access to infrastructure and finance relative to other low-income regions. This can be understood by looking at non-linear effects by firm size -- and the finding that these size effects are particularly strong within Sub-Saharan Africa. Although unreliable infrastructure services and inadequate access to finance generally hamper growth, in Sub-Saharan Africa they are actually associated with higher employment growth rates among micro enterprises. Although employment growth is good news in Sub-Saharan Africa, that much of the expanded employment is in small, labor-intensive, less productive enterprises raises longer-run concerns about the efficiency of the allocation of resources and aggregate productivity growth in the region.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aterido, Reyes, Hallward-Driemeier, Mary
Language:English
Published: 2010-02-01
Subjects:ACCESS TO CREDIT, ACCESS TO FINANCE, ACCESS TO FORMAL FINANCE, ACCESS TO SERVICES, ACCOUNTING, ACCOUNTING SERVICES, ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES, AFFILIATED ORGANIZATIONS, BANK LOANS, BANKS, BENEFICIAL EFFECTS, BRIBE, BRIBES, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT, CORRUPTION, CREDIT CONSTRAINTS, CREDIT PROVISION, CREDIT RELATIONSHIPS, CREDITOR, DEMAND FOR CREDIT, DEVELOPMENT BANK, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, EARNINGS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC POLICY, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, EMPLOYMENT, EMPLOYMENT GROWTH, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, EMPLOYMENT TRENDS, ENDOWMENTS, ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT, ENTERPRISE GROWTH, ENTERPRISE SIZE, ENTERPRISE SIZES, ENTREPRENEUR, ENTREPRENEURS, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, EXCLUSION, EXPANSION, EXTERNAL FINANCING, FINANCIAL MEASURE, FIRM SIZE, FIRMS, FOREIGN CAPITAL, FOREIGN ENTERPRISES, FOREIGN OWNED ENTERPRISES, GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS, GREATER ACCESS, INCOME, INCOME GROUP, INCOME GROUPS, INFLATION, INFORMATION ON ENTERPRISE, INFORMATION ON ENTERPRISES, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, INVESTMENT CLIMATE CONDITIONS, INVESTMENT CLIMATE CONSTRAINTS, JOB CREATION, LABOR INTENSIVE TECHNOLOGIES, LABOR MARKETS, LABOR REGULATIONS, LABOUR, LACK OF ACCESS, LARGE ENTERPRISES, LIMITED ACCESS, LIMITED ACCESS TO FINANCE, LOAN, MACROECONOMICS, MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISE, MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES, MARKET DEVELOPMENT, MEDIUM ENTERPRISES, MICRO ENTERPRISE, MICRO ENTERPRISES, MICRO-ENTERPRISES, OVERDRAFT, PRIVATE INVESTMENT, PRODUCTIVE ENTERPRISES, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC INVESTMENT, PUBLIC SERVICES, RED TAPE, REGULATORY BURDENS, RESOURCE ALLOCATION, RETAINED EARNINGS, SAFETY, SAFETY NETS, SALES GROWTH, SIZE OF ENTERPRISE, SIZE OF ENTERPRISES, SMALL ENTERPRISE, SMALL ENTERPRISES, SMALL FIRMS, SME, TAX ADMINISTRATION, TAXATION, TRADE CREDIT, TRANSPORT, WORKING CAPITAL,
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20100223151145
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/3704
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