India can introduce policies to ensure that greater export orientation boosts gains for workers and spread them more widely to benefit disadvantaged communities, according to a new report by the World Bank and the International Labour Organisation released on Thursday.
The report titled 'Exports to Jobs: Boosting the Gains from Trade in South Asia' says that increasing exports will boost average wages and the biggest beneficiaries will be high-skilled, urban, more experienced and mainly male workers. For low-skilled workers, the shift will result in an increase in formal jobs.
The report says increasing exports can lead to better jobs and higher wages in India, including more formal jobs for youth and women. Labour market policies can help different groups of workers acquire the right skills and ensure that the gains of increased exports are shared more broadly across society.
The report provides options on how to expand and widely share the benefits of higher exports. Improving workers' skills, getting women and youth into more jobs, and addressing distortions that make labour mobility costly are some of the recommended policy actions.
"Our research shows that exports can improve the performance of local labour markets and that policies need to be put in place to increase exports in South Asia, while ensuring that the benefits of higher exports are shared more broadly," said Gladys Lopez-Acevedo, World Bank Lead Economist and one of the report's authors. "Addressing constraints that prevent people from moving and taking advantage of new job opportunities is important."
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The report says India grew at a rate of 7.2 per cent in 2017. At the same time, it reduced the number of people living in poverty. However, most Indians don't have regular jobs in the formal economy. Differences in wages across regions and in the quality of employment opportunities prevail, said the report.
The increasing population also puts pressure on labour markets. In addition, trade has been falling, from 55.8 per cent to 41.1 per cent of gross domestic product between 2012 and 2017. India's exports are mainly capital-intensive goods like chemicals and fabricated metals, meaning that the direct benefits for workers have been limited.
Daniel Samaan, Senior Economist at ILO Research Department and one of the report's authors, said: "Economists and policy makers need a better understanding of how exactly globalisation affects both workers and national labour markets. Our research shows that more exports can create benefits for workers by raising wages and reducing informality, but we need stronger policies to ensure these benefits reach everyone in the labour market, and don't leave any groups behind."
The report breaks new ground in examining the impact of exports on local labour markets in South Asia. It uses an innovative approach, analysing the effect on local employment and wages of changes in exports by combining disaggregated data from household-level or worker-level surveys with trade data from India and Sri Lanka.
The approach builds on a new wave of research looking at how globalisation might contribute to local jobs and wages but, unlike previous studies, it focuses on exports.
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