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Striving for Better Jobs - The Challenge of Informality in the Middle East and North Africa (Paperback, New)
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Striving for Better Jobs - The Challenge of Informality in the Middle East and North Africa (Paperback, New)
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While economic growth has been sustained for a number of years in
many countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region,
this has not resulted in the creation of an adequate number of jobs
and has succeeded, at best, in generating low-quality, informal
jobs. While there is a great deal of heterogeneity across
countries, informality in MENA is widespread, and some countries in
the region are amongst the most informal economies in the world.
The book looks at informality through a human development angle and
focuses specifically on informal employment. In line with this
approach, the working definition for informality adopted in the
book is "lack of social security coverage" (usually understood as
pensions, or if a pension system does not exist, as health
insurance), which captures well the vulnerability associated with
informal employment. Informal workers in MENA are generally engaged
in low productivity jobs - more so than in comparator countries -,
are paid less for otherwise similar work in the formal sector, and
self-report low levels of satisfaction at work. Also, informal
workers in MENA face important mobility barriers into formal
employment and thus lack of social security coverage against
health, unemployment, and old-age risks. Formal employment in the
MENA region is strongly associated with public sector employment.
Opportunities for formal employment in the private sector in the
region remain very limited. The book identifies 5 strategic
directions to promote long-term inclusive growth and formality,
namely: (i) fostering competition; (ii) realigning incentives in
the public sector; (iii) moving towards labor regulations that
promote labor mobility and provide support to workers in periods of
transition; (iv) enhancing the productivity of informal workers
through training and skills upgrading; and (v) reforming existing
social insurance systems and introduce new instruments for coverage
extension. This book is addressed to policy makers, academics, and
practitioners who wish to understand the phenomenon of informal
employment, and policy options for promoting more inclusive and
productive labor market opportunities.
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