Firm Dynamics, Job Outcomes, and Productivity : South African Formal Businesses, 2010-14
The formal private sector has a key role to play in fostering growth and reducing unemployment in South Africa—strengthening its performance is therefore critical. This paper looks at firm behaviour, firm entry and exit, job outcomes, and productiv...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2019
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/140241553174981836/Firm-Dynamics-Job-Outcomes-and-Productivity-South-African-Formal-Businesses-2010-14 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31447 |
Summary: | The formal private sector has a key role
to play in fostering growth and reducing unemployment in
South Africa—strengthening its performance is therefore
critical. This paper looks at firm behaviour, firm entry and
exit, job outcomes, and productivity dynamics using
firm-level administrative data for South Africa. It is the
first paper to benchmark employment and productivity
dynamics against various comparator countries for which
similar analysis has been undertaken. The paper finds that
South Africa has an aged private sector with low firm
dynamism and characterized by large firms that hold a large
share of employment and revenue, although they are not as
productive as micro firms and pay lower wages on average.
The paper also finds that job creation is concentrated
predominantly in incumbent firms, which are old and large,
and job creation from entry and exit is negligible. The
static and dynamic productivity decompositions raise a
concern that although productive efficiency is gained, it is
at least in part at the expense of labor. Large firms are
not exploiting economies of scale, and particularly
unproductive large firms may drive the weak performance of
the private sector. Relatively high wages in South Africa
could be partly explained by the inefficient use of labor
and negative correlation between productivity and size.
Likewise, these larger firms could be responsible for the
negative direct impact on jobs of firms raising productivity. |
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