Type | Working Paper |
Title | A model of comparative advantage with matching in the urban Tanzanian labour market |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
URL | http://www.essa2011.org.za/fullpaper/essa2011_2450.pdf |
Abstract | African labour market analysis has often emphasised average wage differentials across sectors. A high-paying “protected” or formal sector that is usually assumed to comprise unionised jobs in large firms and public sector employment is assumed to exist together with a low paying “sink”, informal or “murky” sector comprised of self-employment and wage employment in unregistered small firms. A labour market with these characteristics has been described as “segmented”, and much effort has been exerted in testing whether labour markets in a variety of countries are indeed segmented. In this chapter I suggest an alternative approach to modeling the Tanzanian labour market and focus on the distinction between wage and self-employment and the role of comparative advantage and individual heterogeneity in determining where to work and earnings in each of these sectors. |
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