CLOSING AFRICA’s EMPLOYMENT GAP
Labor
productivity in Sub-Saharan Africa has been garnering attention recently.
Development economists focus on labor productivity because it tends to be strongly associated with overall well-being measures, especially for the poor, who are reliably endowed with time, but often little else in the way of productive assets.
Development economists focus on labor productivity because it tends to be strongly associated with overall well-being measures, especially for the poor, who are reliably endowed with time, but often little else in the way of productive assets.
Cross-sector
gaps in labor productivity are key indicators of structural change, which is
the economy-wide process by which labor shifts from low-productivity industries
such as agriculture, to those that are higher-productivity, such as industry
and services. This process underpins development and is premised on large
cross-sector gaps in productivity. Economists expect these gaps to be quite
large in the poorest countries, and to get smaller as labor shifts out of
agriculture. Recent evidence suggests these forces are indeed at work in
Sub-Saharan Africa.
In a new study focused on Ethiopia, Malawi, Tanzania and Malawi, I find that the agricultural sector is not necessarily a bastion of low productivity, as is commonly believed, but rather a large reservoir of underemployed workers. This result emerges when labor inputs are measured more carefully. Using the new LSMS-ISA datasets, I used micro-data to replicate the common patterns observed in macro statistics; that annual economic output per worker is lower in agriculture than in other sectors. While national statistics suggest that workers in these four countries are 6 times more productive outside of agriculture than in it, I predict the number is closer to 3.3x on average (See figure 1). This finding was consistent with those of Gollin et al, who recently found that national accounts measures tend to under-estimate productivity in agriculture relative to other sectors.
The left
panel shows sector output per worker per year in agriculture (green) relative
to industry and services (orange and blue, respectively). National accounts
based ratios of output per worker per year are shown in grey. The right panel
shows sector outputs per hour of labor supplied in agriculture, industry and
services.
Next, I
took a closer look at labor inputs. Many workers are counted as agricultural
because they spend at least some time working on farms. A striking pattern
across household surveys is that agricultural workers work fewer hours per year
— 700 hours per agricultural worker compared to 1,900 hours per
non-agricultural worker. Interestingly, it turns out that productivity in
agriculture is a lot closer to productivity outside of it when one accounts for
these differences in hours worked. On a per-hour basis, then, labor is only
1.6x more productive outside of agriculture.
Why
don’t agricultural workers work more hours per year? While beyond the scope of my
study, this question begs for more research. One explanation relates to
agronomic conditions in Sub-Saharan Africa. Given a somewhat fixed supply of
agricultural land, and limited water control, demand for farm labor is not well
smoothed throughout the year. This could limit the ability of smallholder
farmers to productively use more labor on their farms.
Another explanation for
the employment gap is that few people are able to participate in non-farming
activities. Non-agricultural wage employment is low, with 10% of adult
individuals in rural areas participating. Self-employment outside of
agriculture is also low, with 17% of adults in rural areas taking part. And
though these activities are non-agricultural, closer examination of their
descriptions suggests that they are indeed tightly linked to agricultural
production.
These
findings highlight the importance of thinking more about agricultural labor –
not just counting workers, but finding ways for more people to productively
supply more labor to agriculture, the dominant employment sector in Sub-Saharan
Africa.
Ellen McCullough
Also read: Lagos is Ranked 5th, Nigerian Doctor that Set Russian Record, Three South Africans Build Private Satellite, How Far is the African dream and 2015 World Economic Forum on Africa
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