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International Policy and Its Effect on Employment

H. W. Singer

Chapter 9 in The Strategy of International Development, 1975, pp 145-157 from Palgrave Macmillan

Abstract: Abstract It is notoriously difficult to measure unemployment in LDCs in terms which make it comparable with unemployment in the richer countries. Its forms and apparitions are too different, and I agree with Gunnar Myrdal, Michael Lipton, Paul Streeten and others that we must be wary of transferring uncritically western concepts to the different Third World. However, we must be equally careful not to jump from the legitimate refusal to apply First World concepts — or Second World concepts for that matter — to Third World problems, to the illegitimate assumption that unemployment and under-employment in open and disguised forms do not exist, or are not serious, merely because they cannot be measured by familiar concepts and caught by familiar definitions, or because the data are lacking. Without labouring the point, for my present purposes I shall simply assert: (a) that unemployment is extremely serious in the LDCs; (b) that it is much more serious at present in the LDCs, than in the richer countries; (c) that on reasonable definitions unemployment is of the order of magnitude of 25–30 per cent in many LDCs and 20–25 per cent in the overall picture; (d) that it is serious, more or less equally so, both in its rural and urban manifestations; (e) that unemployment has become increasingly serious in the last 10–20 years; (f) that on present indications it is bound to increase further, unless counter-influences appear (which must probably include a vigorous and balanced development of science and technology in directions more relevant to the LDCs and their factor endowments, and in the longer run a slowing down of population growth).

Keywords: Foreign Firm; Rich Country; International Policy; Employment Impact; World Concept (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1975
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-04228-9_9

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