• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Structural Transformation and Productivity Growth in Africa : Uganda in the 2000s
  • Contributor: Ahmed, Sabin [VerfasserIn]; Mengistae, Taye [VerfasserIn]; Yoshino, Yutaka [VerfasserIn]; Zeufack, Albert G. [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015
  • Published in: Policy Research Working Paper ; No. 7504
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource
  • Language: Not determined
  • Keywords: AGE GROUP ; AGE GROUPS ; AGE‐GROUPS ; AGGREGATE EMPLOYMENT ; AGGREGATE PRODUCTIVITY ; AGRICULTURE ; COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ; COMPETITIVENESS ; CREDIT ; DEVELOPMENT ; DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS ; DEVELOPMENT POLICY ; DISTRIBUTION ; DRIVERS ; ECONOMIC GROWTH ; ECONOMIC RENTS ; ECONOMIC RESEARCH ; ECONOMIC THEORY ; ECONOMIES OF SCALE ; ECONOMY ; ELASTICITY ; ELASTICITY OF DEMAND ; EMPLOYEE ; EMPLOYEES ; [...]
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Africa
    Uganda
    English
    en_US
  • Description: Uganda’s economy underwent significant structural change in the 2000s whereby the share of non-tradable services in aggregate employment rose by about 7 percentage points at the expense of the production of tradable goods. The process also involved a 12-percentage-point shift in employment away from small and medium enterprises and larger firms in manufacturing and commercial agriculture mainly to microenterprises in retail trade. In addition, the sectoral reallocation of labor on these two dimensions coincided with significant growth in aggregate labor productivity. However, in and of itself, the same reallocation could only have held back, rather than aid, the observed productivity gains. This was because labor was more productive throughout the period in the tradable goods sector than in the non-tradable sector. Moreover, the effect on aggregate labor productivity of the reallocation of employment between the two sectors could only have been reinforced by the impacts on the same of the rise in the employment share of microenterprises. The effect was also strengthened by a parallel employment shift across the age distribution of enterprises that raised sharply the employment share of established firms at the expense of younger ones and startups. Not only was labor consistently less productive in microenterprises than in small and medium enterprises and larger enterprises across all industries throughout the period, it was also typically less productive in more established firms than in younger ones
  • Access State: Open Access