Publications /
Policy Brief

Back
Employment Creation in Non-Agricultural Sectors
Authors
October 18, 2018

Adequate employment creation is a concern of every government. However, for agriculture-dependent countries whose agricultures are being transformed, the need to generate non-farm employment is particularly urgent as higher productivity agriculture will shed labor that must find productive employment in the non-farm economy.

How have governments in developing countries, burdened with extensive underemployment, particularly of youth, effectively addressed this stiff challenge? This policy brief is about how the governments of Rwanda, Vietnam, and Mauritius have effectively addressed this problem. Though the specific measures taken were different, their experiences were similar in three key respects:

- They focused on raising agricultural productivity growth and on diversifying agriculture;

- They went beyond agriculture to create a supportive macro and trade framework; and

- The employment challenge, even if successfully addressed for a period, never really diminishes. They have to continue to address new threats and opportunities as these emerge.

The central message is to solve the problem of adequately creating non-farm employment, in economies where agriculture is still important (AG/GDP is 10 percent or more), sustained agricultural productivity growth is necessary but not sufficient. Too many developing countries striving to reduce extensive poverty and underemployment have found out that, first, they cannot bypass sustained growth in agricultural productivity; 1 and second, that sustained agricultural productivity growth is, however, not sufficient. The entire economy must be transformed as well.

RELATED CONTENT

  • March 15, 2019
    Alice Eckman, Chercheur et responsable des activités Chine au Centre Asie de l’Institut Français des Relations Internationales (IFRI), nous fournit une analyse détaillée des tensions rela ...
  • Authors
    March 14, 2019
    China's push for Latin American consumers reflects changes back home. Chinese financing in Latin America is changing. After becoming a major source of capital flows to Latin America and the Caribbean over the past 15 years, a more diverse range of investors has surfaced, interested in channeling resources towards infrastructure, governments and state companies. The profile of the Chinese investment in the region tracks the evolution of China’s economy as it moves toward a higher r ...
  • Authors
    Yassine Msadfa
    Yana Myachenkova
    Simone Tagliapietra
    March 14, 2019
    This third Policy Report represents the main pillar of a long-lasting collaboration between Bruegel and the Policy Center for the New South, supported by Compagnia di San Paolo. The Report collects the papers produced by our partner’s researchers along with our joint fellow Uri Dadush and our economists Abdelaaziz Ait Ali and Yassine Msadfa. ...
  • March 11, 2019
    Indépendant depuis seulement 1977, Djibouti, jeune République de moins d'un million d'habitants, s’est transformé en un acteur régional doté d’un poids stratégique et commercial considérable. Bordé par l’Érythrée, au Nord, par l’Ethiopie, à l’Ouest, et par la Somalie, au Sud-est, sa frontière maritime orientale jouxte la mer Rouge et le golfe d’Aden. Ainsi, situé sur le détroit de Bab el Mandeb, d’une largeur de seulement 19km, Djibouti offre un positionnement privilégié afin d’obs ...
  • Authors
    March 8, 2019
    Bouteflika ou ceux qui utilisent son image sont allés jusqu’au bout. Ils ont déposé la candidature du président sortant pour un cinquième mandat consécutif. Ni les gesticulations d’une opposition dépassée par les événements, et qui a préféré le boycott à la lutte, ni le mouvement des foules qui rappelle un certain ‘’Printemps arabe’’, n’ont dissuadé le régime de se maintenir dans sa position initiale : faire briguer au président un 5ème mandat. Panne d’alternatives Pourtant, aucun ...
  • Authors
    March 7, 2019
    A well-functioning modern infrastructure is essential for social and economic development. It has the power to change the quality of life of populations as well as the prospects of businesses. Despite developing Asia’s remarkable economic performances since the 1980s, the region still faces important difficulties in delivering adequate infrastructure services. “Over 400 million Asians do not have electricity access; 300 million live without safe drinking water and 1.5 billion withou ...
  • Authors
    Mouhamadou Moustapha Ly
    Bertrand Bio Mama
    Onasis Tharcisse A. Guèdègbé
    March 6, 2019
    L’évaluation d’impact des projets et programmes de développement est un exercice qui est de plus en plus adopté dans les pays en développement notamment ceux d’Afrique subsaharienne. Entre autres facteurs explicatifs, il y a la rareté des ressources allouées au développement mais aussi la nécessité de mieux connaître les contraintes structurelles au développement. Saisissant l’occasion de la première conférence de West Africa Capacity building and Impact Evaluation Program (WACIE-3i ...