Type | Conference Paper - Nordic Conference on Development Economics |
Title | Productive Jobs for All? Understanding Rwanda’s Development Dynamics |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
City | Helsinki |
Country/State | Finland |
URL | http://www1.wider.unu.edu/crm/sites/default/files/ncde/papers/ronnas.pdf |
Abstract | The main objectives of this study are to (i) gain a thorough understanding of the dynamics of the economy – employment – poverty nexus in Rwanda as a crucial dimension of the country’s rapid economic and social transformation, and (ii) against the backdrop of the conclusions and lessons from this development and projections assess the need for productive employment growth to achieve the Vision 2020 targets to reduce poverty and to identify the main challenges and constraints that will need to be addressed to achieve these targets. Economic regression and falling living standards characterized development in Rwanda for several decades in the late 20th century. Since the turn of the millennium, this dismal trend has been decisively broken, and Rwanda has embarked on a growth path that resembles that of the Asian tigers’ in their early phases of economic development. Agriculture has served as the main driver of growth and increased income, and the importance of the sector as a source of livelihood and employment for Rwandans can hardly be over-stressed. The result has been a broad-based growth of incomes that has lifted large numbers of Rwandans out of often extreme income poverty and which has boosted domestic demand and stimulated growth of the nonagricultural sectors. Notwithstanding these impressive developments, Rwandan agriculture still remains largely subsistence-oriented. The share of agriculture in total GDP growth declined in the second half of the decade as economic diversification and a growth of the non-farm sectors have started to gain pace. However, the role of manufacturing as a driver of growth as well as in the economy as a whole still remains very modest |
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