Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring

This paper examines the Arab Republic of Egypt’s labor market transition dynamics post–Arab Spring based on the two most recent rounds of the Egypt Labor Market Panel Survey conducted in 2012 and 2018. In addition to providing disaggregated-level a...

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Main Authors: Deng, Jingyuan, Elmallakh, Nelly, Flabbi, Luca, Gatti, Roberta
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099927007212248886/IDU08d9f53e404fb204f070ad7d0c6836da56458
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37755
id okr-10986-37755
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-377552022-07-26T05:10:40Z Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring Deng, Jingyuan Elmallakh, Nelly Flabbi, Luca Gatti, Roberta LABOR MARKET TRANSITION COMPARISON EMPLOYMENT INFORMALITY LABOR MARKET PARTICIPATION LABOR MARKET NON-PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT BY GENDER MARRIED WOMEN IN LABOR FORCE INFORMAL LABOR MARKET PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYMENT EDUCATION ADVANTAGE EDUCATION AND LABOR MARKET ACCESS This paper examines the Arab Republic of Egypt’s labor market transition dynamics post–Arab Spring based on the two most recent rounds of the Egypt Labor Market Panel Survey conducted in 2012 and 2018. In addition to providing disaggregated-level analysis by examining labor market transitions by gender, education, and age groups, the paper provides a cross-country, cross-regional perspective by comparing Egypt’s labor market transitions with Mexico’s, relying on data from the Encuesta Nacional de Ocupación y Empleo. To match the span of Mexico’s transitions (which are measured over a one-year period) and Egypt’s (which are measured over six years), the analysis uses Monte Carlo simulations of repeated discrete-time Markov chains. Based on these results, the Egyptian labor market appears to be highly rigid compared to the Mexican labor market, which instead shows a large degree of dynamism regardless of individual initial labor market states at baseline. Auxiliary regression analyses focusing on transitions to and from the dominant absorbing labor market states in Egypt —public sector employment for both genders, nonparticipation for women, and the informal sector for men—show that having a post-secondary education is associated with a lower probability of remaining out of the labor force for women who were already out of the labor force at baseline, while being married at baseline is found to be a significant predictor for women to stay out of the labor force if they were already so. Among men, the better educated are found to be more likely to secure formal employment, be it in the public or private sector, and are more likely to keep their public formal jobs once they secure them. 2022-07-25T18:00:38Z 2022-07-25T18:00:38Z 2022-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099927007212248886/IDU08d9f53e404fb204f070ad7d0c6836da56458 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37755 English Policy Research Working Papers;10126 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Middle East and North Africa Egypt, Arab Republic of
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic LABOR MARKET TRANSITION COMPARISON
EMPLOYMENT
INFORMALITY
LABOR MARKET PARTICIPATION
LABOR MARKET NON-PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN
PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT BY GENDER
MARRIED WOMEN IN LABOR FORCE
INFORMAL LABOR MARKET
PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
EDUCATION ADVANTAGE
EDUCATION AND LABOR MARKET ACCESS
spellingShingle LABOR MARKET TRANSITION COMPARISON
EMPLOYMENT
INFORMALITY
LABOR MARKET PARTICIPATION
LABOR MARKET NON-PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN
PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT BY GENDER
MARRIED WOMEN IN LABOR FORCE
INFORMAL LABOR MARKET
PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYMENT
EDUCATION ADVANTAGE
EDUCATION AND LABOR MARKET ACCESS
Deng, Jingyuan
Elmallakh, Nelly
Flabbi, Luca
Gatti, Roberta
Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Egypt, Arab Republic of
relation Policy Research Working Papers;10126
description This paper examines the Arab Republic of Egypt’s labor market transition dynamics post–Arab Spring based on the two most recent rounds of the Egypt Labor Market Panel Survey conducted in 2012 and 2018. In addition to providing disaggregated-level analysis by examining labor market transitions by gender, education, and age groups, the paper provides a cross-country, cross-regional perspective by comparing Egypt’s labor market transitions with Mexico’s, relying on data from the Encuesta Nacional de Ocupación y Empleo. To match the span of Mexico’s transitions (which are measured over a one-year period) and Egypt’s (which are measured over six years), the analysis uses Monte Carlo simulations of repeated discrete-time Markov chains. Based on these results, the Egyptian labor market appears to be highly rigid compared to the Mexican labor market, which instead shows a large degree of dynamism regardless of individual initial labor market states at baseline. Auxiliary regression analyses focusing on transitions to and from the dominant absorbing labor market states in Egypt —public sector employment for both genders, nonparticipation for women, and the informal sector for men—show that having a post-secondary education is associated with a lower probability of remaining out of the labor force for women who were already out of the labor force at baseline, while being married at baseline is found to be a significant predictor for women to stay out of the labor force if they were already so. Among men, the better educated are found to be more likely to secure formal employment, be it in the public or private sector, and are more likely to keep their public formal jobs once they secure them.
format Working Paper
author Deng, Jingyuan
Elmallakh, Nelly
Flabbi, Luca
Gatti, Roberta
author_facet Deng, Jingyuan
Elmallakh, Nelly
Flabbi, Luca
Gatti, Roberta
author_sort Deng, Jingyuan
title Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
title_short Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
title_full Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
title_fullStr Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
title_full_unstemmed Labor Market Transitions in Egypt Post-Arab Spring
title_sort labor market transitions in egypt post-arab spring
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099927007212248886/IDU08d9f53e404fb204f070ad7d0c6836da56458
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37755
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