Type | Conference Paper - 15th IZA/World Bank Conference: Employment and Development, |
Title | Determinants of participation and earnings in wage employment in Nigeria |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
City | Cape Town |
Country/State | South Africa |
URL | http://www.iza.org/conference_files/worldb2010/aminu_a4295.pdf |
Abstract | The study investigates the determinants of participation and earnings in wage employment in Nigeria. To achieve the objective of the study, three models are estimated for male and female employees across the four wage employment segments considered in the study. These models are probit model, multinomial logit model and Mincerian human capital model. The results of the estimated probit model show that the key determinants of participation of an employable household member (male or female) in wage employment are levels of education attained. Other factors are possession of assets like own-homes, living in free accommodation and residing in urban areas. The estimated multinomial logit models reveal that the factors that influence the probability of participation of males and females in the various segments of wage employment vary overtime perhaps due to the changing government labour policy and the dynamics that characterise the economic environment. It is interesting to note that the levels of education attained by labour suppliers stand out as key determinants of participation across the various segments of wage employment in recent times. The main determinants of hourly wage are the levels of education attained, experience and the location of residence of the employees. The returns to education and experience differ for males and females and they equally vary across the four segments of wage employment adopted for the study. The study also finds some traces of gender wage gap across wage employment segments. |
» | Nigeria - Chilld Labour Survey 2000 |
» | Nigeria - General Household Survey 1998 |