Cash 4 Cars

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 25 June 2011

More on Stagnant Job Growth in the Middle East

Posted on 06:00 by Unknown
I wrote a couple of weeks ago about slow growth and stagnant job creation in the Middle East. In the most recent issue of Finance and Development, Yasser Abdih offers some additional evidence.

Focus on six populous Middle Eastern countries where solid labor market data is available: Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, and Tunisia. Abdih writes: "High unemployment in these countries, together with low labor force participation rates, has resulted in very low ratios of employment to working-age population. With less than 45 percent of working-age people actually employed, this regional rate is the lowest for any region in the world."


When you look at youth employment in particular, the situation is equally dismal. They write:"The average unemployment rate among youth in these nations was 27 percent in 2008, higher than in any other region in the world ...  In contrast to most of the world, joblessness in many Middle Eastern countries tends to increase with schooling: the unemployment rate among those with college degrees exceeds 15 percent in Egypt, Jordan, and Tunisia."




Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in middle east | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • High Food Prices and Political Unrest
    Marco Lagi, Karla Z. Bertrand and Yaneer Bar-Yam of the New England Complex Systems Institute have a working paper up about "The Food C...
  • The Dispute over "Core Inflation"
    Is there a danger of inflation taking off? When the price of gasoline and food shoot through the roof, it seems like it. But central bank of...
  • Bruce Yandle on environmental economics
    David A. Price of the Richmond Fed has an interview with Bruce Yandle . On the difference between a “systems approach” and a “process approa...
  • Africa's Prospects: Half Full or Half Empty?
    There has been a flurry of articles recently with optimistic economic news about sub-Saharan Africa. For example, the December 3 issue of th...
  • World Economic Forum Ranks U.S. Competitiveness
    The World Economic Forum is an independent organization that has been around since the early 1970s. It's perhaps best-known for the annu...
  • Endorsing Association 3E: Ethics, Excellence, Economics
    I would like to take this opportunity to heartily endorse Association 3E: Ethics, Excellence, Economics. I discovered this organization last...
  • Asian Century or Middle Income Trap?
    Will Asia come to dominate the global economy during the 21st century? The Asian Development Bank published a thoughtful report on the subje...
  • Who is Using $1 Trillion in U.S. Currency?
    Jeremy Gerst and Daniel J. Wilson of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco have a short essay: "What's in Your Wallet? T...
  • Low-Cost Education Reforms: Later Starts, K-8, and Focusing Teachers
    Discussions of education reform often seem to collide with a budgetary brick wall. Longer school year? Better teacher pay? Longer school day...
  • Using Financial Repression to Reduce Government Debt
    The usual ways of reducing a government debt burden over time are fairly well-known: cut spending or raise taxes; have the economy grow fast...

Categories

  • Africa
  • aging
  • agriculture
  • American dream
  • annuities
  • articles
  • banking
  • behavioral
  • biofuels
  • biomedical
  • brain science
  • budget deficits
  • capital flows
  • China
  • choice
  • cities
  • climate
  • column
  • convergence
  • credit rating agencies
  • crime
  • currency
  • debt
  • deficit
  • demand
  • demand and supply
  • deposit insurance
  • deregulation
  • development
  • disability insurance
  • drug policy
  • econometrics
  • economics in life
  • economists
  • education
  • employment
  • energy
  • environment
  • euro
  • Europe
  • exchange rates
  • exports
  • externalities
  • fdi
  • financial crisis
  • fiscal
  • fisfcal
  • food
  • food prices
  • free
  • game theory
  • gender
  • gender equality
  • genetics
  • geyser
  • globalization
  • gold
  • grades
  • Great Depression
  • Great Recession
  • growth
  • health
  • health care
  • higher education
  • history
  • households
  • housing
  • immigration
  • inequality
  • inflation
  • information
  • infrastructure
  • innovation
  • interest
  • international
  • international finance
  • international trade
  • interview
  • ipo
  • JEP
  • jobs
  • journals
  • Keynes
  • Krugman
  • labor
  • Labor Day
  • labor market
  • labor markets
  • long-term care
  • macro
  • macroeconomics
  • Medicare
  • microfinance
  • middle east
  • migration
  • minimum wage
  • monetary
  • monetary policy
  • moral hazard
  • Noriel Roubini
  • oil
  • olive oil
  • opportunity cost
  • payday loans
  • pension funds
  • policy evaluation
  • ponzi
  • population
  • postal service
  • poverty
  • price bubbles
  • price regulation
  • quotation
  • recovery
  • redistribution
  • regulation
  • resources
  • retirement
  • safety
  • Scrooge
  • social security
  • sociology
  • sunk costs
  • tax expenditures
  • tax policy
  • tax rates
  • taxes
  • teaching
  • teaching company
  • technology
  • textbooks
  • tourism
  • tradeoffs
  • transportation
  • unemployment
  • unions
  • usury
  • weak ties
  • WTO

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2011 (207)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (28)
    • ►  October (27)
    • ►  September (29)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (28)
    • ▼  June (32)
      • What Would Uninsured Americans Pay for Health Insu...
      • Inequality of Mortality
      • Not What You Know or Who You Know, But Where You Work
      • Searching for Plausible Budget Projections
      • Will China Catch Up to the U.S. Economy?
      • More on Stagnant Job Growth in the Middle East
      • More on a Vehicle Miles Travelled Tax
      • The Supply of Science Ph.D.'s
      • Comparing Oil Price Shocks
      • Medical tourism
      • An Interview with Joel Slemrod on Tax Policy
      • Caballero #3: The Pretense of Knowledge Syndrome i...
      • Caballero #2: Moral Hazard and Policy During a Crisis
      • Caballero #1: Demand for Safe Assets in the Financ...
      • Switching from a fuel tax to a vehicle-miles tax t...
      • Report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy
      • Mark Bils on price measurement
      • The Case Against Price Gouging Laws
      • Africa's economic development
      • Long-Term Unemployment in the U.S.
      • How much are automatic stabilizers affecting curre...
      • More on Teaching Monetary Policy After the Recessi...
      • McKinsey on economic gains from the Internet
      • The Middle East: Slow Growth and Stagnant Job Crea...
      • Accountable Care Organizations
      • Setting up a discussion of the Obama stimulus package
      • Green Energy is not Growth Energy
      • The Miles-per-Gallon Fallacy
      • Does federal regulation impose costs of $1.75 tril...
      • Social Security turns an uncomfortable corner
      • David Hume and the $20 bill on the sidewalk
      • When Should Short-Term Fiscal Stimulus Go Into Rev...
    • ►  May (9)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile