损失、恢复和前路漫漫:追踪印度非正规工人的疫情。

IF 1 Q3 ECONOMICS
Indian Journal of Labour Economics Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-03 DOI:10.1007/s41027-022-00418-1
Paaritosh Nath, S Nelson Mandela, Aishwarya Gawali
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下研究利用在印度实施的 68 天严格封锁期间和之后对 2778 名工人进行访谈的结果,探讨了大流行病对生计的影响以及随后的恢复程度或缺乏恢复的情况。该研究特别关注非正规经济部门的工人,通过深入了解处于社会边缘的工人的就业和收入恢复情况,为有关 Covid-19 经济影响的大量研究提供了有益的补充。这些研究结果在不同的社会经济群体中进行了拼接,以展示大流行病对非正规经济部门中不同人群的不同影响。我们的研究结果表明,疫情封锁六个月后,五分之一的人仍然没有工作。以封锁前已就业和封锁期间失去工作为条件,我们发现城市受访者、女性、60 岁以上工人和毕业生从冲击中恢复过来的可能性明显较低。对女工进行的类似调查显示,中年妇女、从未结过婚的妇女以及未受过教育或只受过小学和初中教育的妇女从失业中恢复过来的可能性要大得多。而老年妇女、城市妇女和穆斯林妇女从失业中恢复过来的可能性则明显较低。总体而言,收入只有大流行之前的一半。一些经济条件较好的工人转而从事更不稳定的工作。由于收入下降,较贫穷的工人家庭被迫借贷,贷款额是其平均月收入的数倍。在失业和逆向迁移的背景下,调查结果表明,即使在解除限制后,"全国农村就业保障法 "计划下仍有大量工作需求未得到满足。我们的结论是,尽管在随后的一段时间内出现了部分复苏,但大流行病引发的封锁破坏了非正规经济中很大一部分人赖以生存的物质条件。此外,任何重新设想非正规经济部门社会保护计划的尝试都必须考虑到最容易受到经济冲击影响生计的群体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Loss, Recovery and the Long Road Ahead: Tracking India's Informal Workers Through the Pandemic.

Loss, Recovery and the Long Road Ahead: Tracking India's Informal Workers Through the Pandemic.

Loss, Recovery and the Long Road Ahead: Tracking India's Informal Workers Through the Pandemic.

Loss, Recovery and the Long Road Ahead: Tracking India's Informal Workers Through the Pandemic.

Drawing on results from a panel of 2778 workers interviewed during and after the 68-day hard lockdown imposed in India, the following study examines the livelihood impact of the pandemic and the extent of subsequent recovery or lack thereof. Focussing specifically on workers located in the informal economy, the study is a useful addition to the burgeoning body of work on the economic impacts of Covid-19 by providing an insight into the employment and earnings recovery of those located at the margins. These findings are spliced across socio-economic groups to showcase the differential impact of the pandemic on different demographics within the informal sector. Our results show that six months after the hard lockdown, one out five persons were still out of work. Conditioned on being employed prior to the lockdown and having lost work during the lockdown, we find that urban respondents, women, workers above 60 and graduates were significantly less likely to recover from the shock. A similar exercise carried out for women workers showed that middle aged women, never married women and women who were not-literate or educated up until primary and middle school were significantly more likely to recover from job loss. Older women, those located in urban areas and Muslim women were on the other hand significantly less likely to recover from the job loss. Earnings on the whole were half of what they used to be prior to the pandemic. Some better off workers shifted to more precarious types of employment. Given the fall in earnings, poorer worker households were forced to borrow and the amount of loan taken was multiple times their average monthly income. In the context of loss in employment and reverse migration, the survey results show a substantial unmet demand for work under the MGNREGA programme even after the lockdown was lifted. We conclude that despite a partial recovery in the subsequent period, the pandemic-induced lockdown has undermined the material conditions for subsistence for a large segment within the informal economy. Moreover, any attempts made to re-imagine what a social protection programme for the informal economy should look like must take into account the segments most susceptible to an economic shock on their livelihoods.

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来源期刊
Indian Journal of Labour Economics
Indian Journal of Labour Economics Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics and Econometrics
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: Indian Journal of Labour Economics (IJLE) is one of the few prominent Journals of its kind from South Asia. It provides eminent economists and academicians an exclusive forum for an analysis and understanding of issues pertaining to labour economics, industrial relations including supply and demand of labour services, personnel economics, distribution of income, unions and collective bargaining, applied and policy issues in labour economics, and labour markets and demographics. The journal includes peer reviewed articles, research notes, sections on promising new theoretical developments, comparative labour market policies or subjects that have the attention of labour economists and labour market students in general, particularly in the context of India and other developing countries.
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