Type | Book |
Title | Determinants of Unemployment among Sri Lankan University Graduates |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
Publisher | Colombo: Department of Manpower and Employment |
URL | http://maled-dl.itcilo.org/study-paper-area-1/Thesis_Dissanayake_A.Y.20102011.pdf |
Abstract | Sri Lanka, a democratic country with a market-based economy, has over the years progressively moved from a low-income country to a middleincome country. Despite 25 years of civil war and the shocks of tsunami in 2004, the country’s economy has been resilient and has coped relatively well with the challenges. The country is nevertheless grappling with maximizing the benefits of globalization. This makes the development process challenging. Interestingly, Sri Lanka’s social indicators, with a Human Development Index Ranking of 99, are well above those in comparable developing countries in South Asia. (ILO, 2008) The sectoral composition of the economy has changed from an agriculture-based economy to one dominated by the service sector. The service sector was the highest contributor to GDP in 2010, with 57.8 percent, followed by the industrial sector at 29.4 percent and the agricultural sector at 12.8 percent. With increasing economic liberalization, the services sector has become the largest sector in terms of employment with 43.1 percent of total employments. Agriculture, however, seems still to be a key source of employments in rural areas (at 34.4 percent of employments in rural areas), where the largest part of the population (49.8 percent of total labour force) resides. Around 63 percent of the workforce is employed in the informal sector, of which a majority resides in the rural parts of the country. |
» | Sri Lanka - Labour Force Survey - 2009 |