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Where have all the workers gone?
ndia's post-reform economic development has seen a sustained decline in the labour intensity of the organised manufacturing sector, including in labour-intensive industries. This paper argues that this occurred due to an increase in the real wage to rental price of capital ratio, which, in turn...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2015
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LEADER | 01093nab a22001217a 4500 | ||
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008 | 160615b2015 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
100 | |a Sen, Kunal | ||
245 | |a Where have all the workers gone? |c puzzle of declining labour intencity in organised Indian | ||
260 | |c 2015 | ||
300 | |a 108 - 115 | ||
520 | |a ndia's post-reform economic development has seen a sustained decline in the labour intensity of the organised manufacturing sector, including in labour-intensive industries. This paper argues that this occurred due to an increase in the real wage to rental price of capital ratio, which, in turn, was mostly due to a fall in the relative price of capital goods. The decrease was driven by trade reforms in capital goods, and falling import tariffs on capital goods. While a fall in the relative price of capital may have led to an increase in the rate of private fixed investment in machines, and consequently, economic growth, one inadvertent consequence of the trade reforms was that they disincentivised firms from hiring labour. | ||
773 | |a Economic and Political Weekly |d Jun 06 | ||
999 | |c 43846 |d 43846 |