Impact of Regulatory Policies on Job Creation in Developing Countries
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18559/RIELF.2022.1.9Keywords:
Regulatory policy, Labour market, International labour market, Segmentation, EmploymentAbstract
The objective of this paper is to study the effects of labor market regulation policies on the allocation of labor. Specifically, it aims to highlight the effects of regulatory policies on the choice of kind of job, taking into account market segmentation and barriers to entry into the formal sector. To do so, we used the fourth Cameroon Household Survey (ECAM 4) and a self-selection model. The results show that individual and institutional factors are responsible for the misallocation of labor between the formal and informal sectors. Thus, we find that women and youth preference for informal jobs is involuntary because it is constrained by the existence of barriers to entry to the labor market. These results suggest that there is a certain amount of regulatory flexibility to increase the level of formal employment, even to transform informal jobs into formal jobs.(original abstract)
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Poznań University of Economics and Business
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet quam leo, cursus vitae, commodo convallis consequat. Donec pulvinar porta neque, blandit risus commodo sit amet ante. Quisque condimentum. Donec orci interdum euismod scelerisque tincidunt. Maecenas vitae mi. Pellentesque orci vitae nunc venenatis tristique, convallis accumsan, dolor sit amet metus. Curabitur tempor. Phasellus sem. Quisque.