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  • Labour Regulations, Growth and Employment: A South Asian Perspective

    Author(s)
    Islam, Iyanatul
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Islam, Iyanatul
    Year published
    2021
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Drawing on the experience of four South Asian economies (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka), this article argues that properly designed labour market institutions and regulations play a pivotal role in engendering desirable economic and social dividends. The alternative is a Hobbesian world of an unregulated labour market, which is likely to produce poor wages and working conditions. Policymakers in the region should acknowledge common challenges pertaining to low utilisation of the skills and talents of young people, entrenched gender disparities, high, and in many cases rising, informality, significant incidence of ...
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    Drawing on the experience of four South Asian economies (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka), this article argues that properly designed labour market institutions and regulations play a pivotal role in engendering desirable economic and social dividends. The alternative is a Hobbesian world of an unregulated labour market, which is likely to produce poor wages and working conditions. Policymakers in the region should acknowledge common challenges pertaining to low utilisation of the skills and talents of young people, entrenched gender disparities, high, and in many cases rising, informality, significant incidence of working poverty and vulnerability. They should focus on designing complementary interventions to tackle such shared challenges rather than being fixated on the narrowly conceived notion of deregulating labour markets.
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    Journal Title
    South Asian Journal of Human Resources Management
    Volume
    8
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/23220937211049137
    Subject
    Political economy and social change
    Labour economics
    Social Sciences
    Management
    Business & Economics
    Diversity management
    HR planning
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/413399
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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