LCR Crisis Briefs
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This series investigates the impact of the financial crisis on the Latin America and the Caribbean Region (LCR).
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Publication Social Consequences of the Global Financial Crisis in Latin America : Some Preliminary, and Surprisingly Optimistic, Conjectures(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-11) Schady, Norbert; Ferreira, Francisco H.G.Surprisingly, the most severe economic crisis the world has seen since the great depression does not appear to have had as dramatic an impact on poverty in Latin America as might have been expected. The exceptions to this heartening assessment are the countries geographically and economically closest to the United States, chiefly Mexico. Elsewhere, although poverty statistics for 2008-09 are not yet available, the data on output, unemployment and real wages suggest relatively modest changes in poverty. There are two candidate explanations for the smaller-than-expected increases in poverty in Latin America: lower output declines, deriving from enhanced protection against external shocks; and a lower output elasticity of poverty. If the latter is indeed observed when the required data becomes available, the report conjecture that it may reflect both the lower inflation rates now prevalent in the region, and recent reforms in the social protection system. For all their faults, the social protection systems in many Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) countries now reach the poor rather than only the middle-classes. The note concludes arguing against complacency, and pointing to areas where further research; and greater policy reform and experimentation are needed.Publication Labor Markets and the Crisis in Latin America and the Caribbean (A Preliminary Review for Selected Countries)(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-06) Murrugarra, Edmundo; Freije-RodrÃguez, SamuelCountries in Latin America and the Caribbean are experiencing the impact of the international financial crisis on labor markets across different dimensions, such as employment, wages and the quality of labor market arrangements. This note reviews a selected group of countries to assess the speed and severity of labor market impacts. It identifies patterns in the changing labor market conditions, such as specific sectors or types of workers being affected. It also describes countries' preparedness and capacity to respond to the crisis and the specific policy responses being implemented. The review finds a large variation in impacts and responses in the context of increases in unemployment rates that range from 0.4 to 2.1 percentage points. The impacts of the crisis are evolving rapidly but seem to have a more noticeable negative effect among salaried workers in Brazil and Chile whereas in Colombia non-salaried workers have been affected the most. Mexico shows both types of workers as being seriously hit by the recession.Publication Crisis in LAC : Infrastructure Investment and the Potential for Employment Generation(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-05) Tuck, Laura; Schwartz, Jordan; Andres, LuisInfrastructure investment is a central part of the stimulus plans of the Latin America and Caribbean Region (LAC) as it confronts the growing financial crisis. This paper estimates the potential effects on direct, indirect, and induced employment for different types of infrastructure projects with LAC-specific variables. The analysis finds that the direct and indirect short-term employment generation potential of infrastructure capital investment projects may be considerable-averaging around 40,000 annual jobs per US$1billion in LAC, depending upon such variables as the mix of subsectors in the investment program; the technologies deployed; local wages for skilled and unskilled labor; and the degrees of leakages to imported inputs. While these numbers do not account for substitution effect, they are built around an assumed "basket" of investments that crosses infrastructure sectors most of which are not employment-maximizing. Albeit limited in scope, rural road maintenance projects may employ 200,000 to 500,000 annualized direct jobs for every US$1billion spent. The paper also describes the potential risks to effective infrastructure investment in an environment of crisis including sorting and planning contradictions, delayed implementation and impact, affordability, and corruption.Publication How will Labor Markets Adjust to the Crisis? A Dynamic View(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2009-03) Maloney, WilliamTracking flows of workers among different sectors of employment during economic downturns can shed light on the mechanism of labor market adjustment and inform the design of safety net programs. Though patterns may differ across recessions, the author find that the generally countercyclical rise in unemployment and informality is driven primarily by a reduction in hiring in the formal sector, rather than increased labor shedding. Further, changes in the rate of separations from informality are the largest determinant of changes in unemployment. Both suggest that safety nets should focus less on formal job loss per se and more generally on movements in family incomes, perhaps revealed through self targeting mechanisms.