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Long-term Growth–Employment Relationship in India:

Long-term Growth–Employment Relationship in India: This article focuses on the growth–employment relationship and the determinants of labour force participation rate. In the time-series framework, employment is seen to have a greater impact on GDP rather than vice versa. This is quite consistent with the literature that employment contracts can be long term in nature, and they are usually not flexible in the short run. Hence, fluctuations in the commodity market do not affect employment immediately. The effect of employment on growth through the demand linkage is usually overlooked, which is brought out by this study, suggesting that demand deceleration caused by sluggish expansion in jobs can make economic growth unsustainable in the long run. From supply side of labour, poverty-induced participation in the job market is evident, and women are seen to be largely engaged in the agricultural sector. The effect of physical infrastructure on women’s work participation is positive. Large household size and child to women ratio affect women’s work participation adversely. On the whole, the positive effect of health and education and a strong impact of physical infrastructure on labour market participation of rural women are evident. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Asian Development Research SAGE

Long-term Growth–Employment Relationship in India:

Journal of Asian Development Research , Volume 1 (1): 13 – Feb 4, 2021

Long-term Growth–Employment Relationship in India:

Journal of Asian Development Research , Volume 1 (1): 13 – Feb 4, 2021

Abstract

This article focuses on the growth–employment relationship and the determinants of labour force participation rate. In the time-series framework, employment is seen to have a greater impact on GDP rather than vice versa. This is quite consistent with the literature that employment contracts can be long term in nature, and they are usually not flexible in the short run. Hence, fluctuations in the commodity market do not affect employment immediately. The effect of employment on growth through the demand linkage is usually overlooked, which is brought out by this study, suggesting that demand deceleration caused by sluggish expansion in jobs can make economic growth unsustainable in the long run. From supply side of labour, poverty-induced participation in the job market is evident, and women are seen to be largely engaged in the agricultural sector. The effect of physical infrastructure on women’s work participation is positive. Large household size and child to women ratio affect women’s work participation adversely. On the whole, the positive effect of health and education and a strong impact of physical infrastructure on labour market participation of rural women are evident.

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References (6)

Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
Copyright © 2022 by Asian Development Research Institute, Patna, unless otherwise noted. Manuscript content on this site is licensed under Creative Commons Licenses
ISSN
2633-190X
eISSN
2633-1918
DOI
10.1177/2633190x20976499
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This article focuses on the growth–employment relationship and the determinants of labour force participation rate. In the time-series framework, employment is seen to have a greater impact on GDP rather than vice versa. This is quite consistent with the literature that employment contracts can be long term in nature, and they are usually not flexible in the short run. Hence, fluctuations in the commodity market do not affect employment immediately. The effect of employment on growth through the demand linkage is usually overlooked, which is brought out by this study, suggesting that demand deceleration caused by sluggish expansion in jobs can make economic growth unsustainable in the long run. From supply side of labour, poverty-induced participation in the job market is evident, and women are seen to be largely engaged in the agricultural sector. The effect of physical infrastructure on women’s work participation is positive. Large household size and child to women ratio affect women’s work participation adversely. On the whole, the positive effect of health and education and a strong impact of physical infrastructure on labour market participation of rural women are evident.

Journal

Journal of Asian Development ResearchSAGE

Published: Feb 4, 2021

Keywords: Employment; elasticity; labour force; growth; poverty

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