Publication:
Labor Market Regulations: What Do We Know About Their Impacts in Developing Countries?

dc.contributor.authorBetcherman, Gordon
dc.date.accessioned2016-08-04T19:59:28Z
dc.date.available2016-08-04T19:59:28Z
dc.date.issued2015-02
dc.description.abstractLabor market regulation is a high-profile, and often contentious, area of public policy. Although these regulations have been studied most extensively in developed countries, there is a growing body of literature on their effects in developing countries. This paper reviews that literature and focuses on the impacts of two important types of labor market regulation, minimum wages and employment protection legislation (EPL), on employment, earnings, and productivity. Strong and opposing views exist regarding the costs and benefits of these regulations, but the results of this review suggest that their impacts are generally smaller than the heat of the debates would suggest. Efficiency effects are found sometimes, but not always, and the effects can be in either direction and are usually modest. The distributional impacts of both minimum wage and employment protection legislation are clearer, with two effects predominating: an equalizing effect among covered workers, but with groups such as youth, women, and the less skilled disproportionately outside the coverage and its benefits. Although the overall conclusion is one of modest effects in most cases, the policy implication is not that these regulations do not matter. On the one hand, both minimum wages and EPL can affect distributional objectives. On the other hand, these regulations can generate undesirable economic or social impacts if they are established or operate in ways that exacerbate the labor market imperfections that they were designed to address.en
dc.identifier.citationWorld Bank Research Observer
dc.identifier.doi10.1596/24811
dc.identifier.issn1564-6971
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10986/24811
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherOxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank
dc.relation.ispartofseriesWorld Bank Research Observer
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holderWorld Bank
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo
dc.subjectactive labor
dc.subjectcollective bargaining
dc.subjectemployment performance
dc.subjectjob creation
dc.subjectlabor market
dc.subjectlabor policies
dc.subjectlabor regulations
dc.subjectminimum wage
dc.subjectunemployment insurance
dc.subjectworking conditions
dc.titleLabor Market Regulationsen
dc.title.subtitleWhat Do We Know About Their Impacts in Developing Countries?en
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.typeArticle de journalfr
dc.typeArtículo de revistaes
dspace.entity.typePublication
okr.date.disclosure2016-08-01
okr.date.doiregistration2025-05-06T11:39:59.976614Z
okr.doctypePublications & Research::Journal Article
okr.doctypePublications & Research
okr.identifier.doi10.1093/wbro/lku005
okr.journal.nbpages124-153
okr.language.supporteden
okr.peerreviewAcademic Peer Review
okr.topicSocial Protections and Labor::Labor Markets
okr.topicSocial Protections and Labor::Labor Policies
okr.topicSocial Protections and Labor::Labor Standards
okr.volume30(1)
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication1f2c6902-2b66-473b-b36e-ea25b97d8aae
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication.latestForDiscovery1f2c6902-2b66-473b-b36e-ea25b97d8aae
relation.isJournalOfPublication9e5fbe82-492f-4142-8378-17d50245d9de
relation.isJournalVolumeOfPublication86cbaf6c-0621-4403-996d-1b4d3d36f797
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