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Promoting Employment Intensive Growth in Sri Lanka Seminar on National Employment Policy October 2011 Prof. Sunil Chandrasiri Dean Faculty of Graduate.

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Presentation on theme: "Promoting Employment Intensive Growth in Sri Lanka Seminar on National Employment Policy October 2011 Prof. Sunil Chandrasiri Dean Faculty of Graduate."— Presentation transcript:

1 Promoting Employment Intensive Growth in Sri Lanka Seminar on National Employment Policy October 2011 Prof. Sunil Chandrasiri Dean Faculty of Graduate Studies University of Colombo

2 Promoting Employment Intensive Growth in Sri Lanka 1. Why employment intensive growth is important? 2. Macro level evidence 3. Priority Sectors 4. Policy implications

3 Stages of Development Innovation Driven  Business Sophistication  Innovativeness Efficiency Driven  Labour Market Efficiency  Goods market efficiency  Technological Readiness Sri Lanka 52 out of 142 countries Factor Driven * Health & primary education

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5 Employment Intensity of Growth 1996-20022002-2010 Primary sector 1.230.17 Secondary 0.520.38 Tertiary sector 0.940.13 All sectors1.160.14

6 Sub-sector experience- Elasticity Sub-sector2002-2010 1. Agriculture -2004-09 0.57 2. Manufacturing 0.50 6. Construction 0.80 7. Wholesale and retail trade 0.35 8. Hotels and Restaurants 0.18 9. Transport and Communication 0.21 10. Banking, insurance and real estate 0.49 12. Private services 0.07

7 Growth of Real Value Added and Employment – 2002-2010 2. Manufacturing; 3. Construction: 5. Hotels and Restaurants 6. Transport, Storage and Communication; 7.Banking: 1. Agriculture; 4.Wholesale and Retail; 8.Private services

8 Priority Sectors- Employment Intensity Sub-sector2002-2010 1. Tea 2.22 2. Rubber 1.06 6. Coconut 1.69 7. Textiles and Garments 0.44 8. Jewelry 1.1 9. Hotels and Restaurants 1.41 10. ICT 1.41 Note: Health & Gem sectors: not estimated No data

9 Growth Implications of Priority Sectors SectorGrowth of Exports % Employment Elasticity Female Employnt % 1. Tea 7.31.4055 2. Rubber 19.60.9640 6. Coconut 5.62.4535 7. Textiles & Gmts 5.10.5348 8. Food & Bevgs 30.50.6340 9. Gem & Jewelry 0.791.130 10. ICT 151.4145 11. Tourism 12.81.4130

10 Government Policy Support Sources: Key policy documents at national and Ministry level National Level 1.Promote Investment 2.Control Inflation 3.Promote employment 4.Fiscal and monetary policy 5.No mention about wage policy Sub-sector level 1.Productivity enhancement 2.Tax incentives 3.Skills development 4.Technology support 5.Export promotion 6.Value addition

11 Government Policy Support contd 1.Sub-sector specific policy support system is comprehensive and action oriented 2.Both national and sub-sector specific policies do not cover wage policies, employee welfare, quality of employment, and industrial labour relations 3.Priority sectors have the capacity to promote job-rich growth

12 Summary -Overall 1.Employment intensity in secondary sector is hi gher 2.Presence of medium and long-term development targets 3.Influence of institutional factors on growth of employment 4.Presence of low-productivity and low –pay policy

13 Summary – Sector specific 1.Policy support for export oriented-growth in promoting employment 2.Emphasis on productivity, skills development and R & D orientation 3.Influence of institutional factors on growth of employment

14 Recommendations – National level 1.Application of sub-sector approach to promote growth and employment should be continued 2.The wage levels and employee welfare should also be included in policy documents 3.High-productivity and high-wages policy needs to be promoted at national level 4.Export oriented growth promoting employment should be further strengthened

15 Recommendations – Sub-sectoral level 1.Agriculture- Application of sub-sector approach to promote growth and employment should be continued 2.The wage levels and employee welfare should also be included in policy documents 3.High-productivity and high-wages policy needs to be promoted at national level 4.Export oriented growth promoting employment should be further strengthened

16 Conclusion The small open economy of Sri Lanka is well poised to make a transition from factor driven to efficiency driven stage. Policy support for job-rich growth would promote Sri Lanka as one of the key investment centers in Asia.

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