Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity. / Selaya, Pablo; Thiele, Rainer .

2008.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Selaya, P & Thiele, R 2008 'Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity'.

APA

Selaya, P., & Thiele, R. (2008). Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity.

Vancouver

Selaya P, Thiele R. Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity. 2008.

Author

Selaya, Pablo ; Thiele, Rainer . / Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity. 2008.

Bibtex

@techreport{71e01e26776949ecbaa6c57f0366844f,
title = "Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity",
abstract = "The paper examines empirically the proposition that aid to poor countries is detrimental for external competitiveness, giving rise to Dutch disease type effects. At the aggregate level, aid is found to have a positive effect on growth of labour productivity. A sectoral decomposition shows that the effect is significant and positive both in the tradables and the nontradables sectors. The paper thus finds no empirical support for the hypothesis that aid reduces external competitiveness in developing countries. Possible reasons are the existence of large idle labour capacity and high levels of dollarization in financial liabilities at the firm level.",
author = "Pablo Selaya and Rainer Thiele",
note = "JEL classification: F35, O47 ",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity

AU - Selaya, Pablo

AU - Thiele, Rainer

N1 - JEL classification: F35, O47

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - The paper examines empirically the proposition that aid to poor countries is detrimental for external competitiveness, giving rise to Dutch disease type effects. At the aggregate level, aid is found to have a positive effect on growth of labour productivity. A sectoral decomposition shows that the effect is significant and positive both in the tradables and the nontradables sectors. The paper thus finds no empirical support for the hypothesis that aid reduces external competitiveness in developing countries. Possible reasons are the existence of large idle labour capacity and high levels of dollarization in financial liabilities at the firm level.

AB - The paper examines empirically the proposition that aid to poor countries is detrimental for external competitiveness, giving rise to Dutch disease type effects. At the aggregate level, aid is found to have a positive effect on growth of labour productivity. A sectoral decomposition shows that the effect is significant and positive both in the tradables and the nontradables sectors. The paper thus finds no empirical support for the hypothesis that aid reduces external competitiveness in developing countries. Possible reasons are the existence of large idle labour capacity and high levels of dollarization in financial liabilities at the firm level.

M3 - Working paper

BT - Aid and Sectoral Labour Productivity

ER -

ID: 32298541