Agricultural Productivity, Human Development, and Manufacturing Employment: Africa

R. Grabowski, S. Self
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Abstract

ABSTRACT:The impact of agricultural productivity growth on the process of structural change, an increase in the share of labor employed in manufacturing, is a much debated topic. One perspective argues that agricultural productivity promotes structural change via its contribution of various resources to the manufacturing sector. Another hypothesis proposed is that agricultural productivity growth will draw resources away from agriculture. This paper hypothesizes that agricultural productivity growth plays a key role in the structural change process, but not necessarily through the mechanisms usually proposed. It is hypothesized here that agricultural productivity growth improves the quality of human labor (measured by the human development index, human capital accumulation, and reductions in infant mortality). In turn, improvements in the quality of human labor make it more profitable to employ labor in manufacturing and thus structural change, measured by the share of manufacturing employment in total employment, increases. These hypotheses are tested using dynamic ordinary least squares (DOLS) techniques utilizing data from seventeen countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. The findings indicate that agricultural productivity growth has a significant positive impact human labor quality as measured by the human development index, human capital accumulation, and reductions in infant mortality. In addition, improvements in the quality of human labor in turn have a significant positive impact on the extent of structural change as measured by the share of manufacturing employment as a share of total employment. In addition, trade, as measured by exports plus imports divided by GDP, also has a significant positive impact on the extent of structural change. Finally, inflation appears to slow the structural change process. The policy implications are straightforward. Agricultural productivity does indeed seem to be important in the process of structural change. Thus development programs involving Sub-Saharan Africa should focus on investment in the development of agricultural technologies that will raise agricultural productivity. In a broader sense, governments should focus investment on improving the overall quality of labor.
农业生产力、人类发展和制造业就业:非洲
摘要:农业生产率的提高对结构性变化的影响,即制造业就业比例的增加,一直是一个备受争议的话题。一种观点认为,农业生产力通过向制造业贡献各种资源来促进结构变化。另一种假设是,农业生产率的增长将从农业中抽走资源。本文假设农业生产率增长在结构变化过程中起关键作用,但不一定是通过通常提出的机制。这里假设农业生产率的增长提高了人类劳动的质量(通过人类发展指数、人力资本积累和婴儿死亡率的降低来衡量)。反过来,人类劳动力质量的提高使得在制造业雇佣劳动力更有利可图,因此,以制造业就业占总就业的比例来衡量的结构变化增加了。利用撒哈拉以南非洲17个国家的数据,使用动态普通最小二乘(DOLS)技术对这些假设进行了检验。研究结果表明,农业生产率增长对人类发展指数、人力资本积累和婴儿死亡率降低所衡量的人类劳动质量有显著的积极影响。此外,人类劳动质量的提高反过来又对结构变化的程度产生了显著的积极影响,这是通过制造业就业占总就业的份额来衡量的。此外,以出口加进口除以GDP来衡量的贸易,也对结构变化的程度产生了显著的积极影响。最后,通胀似乎减缓了结构性改革的进程。其政策含义是直截了当的。农业生产力在结构变化的过程中似乎确实很重要。因此,涉及撒哈拉以南非洲地区的发展项目应该把重点放在提高农业生产力的农业技术开发投资上。从更广泛的意义上讲,政府应该把投资重点放在提高劳动力的整体素质上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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