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Understanding and Predicting Job Losses due to COVID-19 : Empirical Evidence from Middle Income Countries

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  • Hatayama,Maho
  • Li,Yiruo
  • Osborne,Theresa Kay

Abstract

This paper utilizes firm survey data to understand which formal private sector jobs are most atrisk from COVID-19 or similar future crises, based on empirical evidence from two middle-income economies. Inparticular, it estimates the importance for formal private sector job losses of various COVID-19 pandemic-related labormarket shocks and mitigating factors, such as the closure of non-essential industries, workers’ ability to perform theirjobs from home, infection risks to workers, customers’ infection risk, global demand shocks, input supplyconstraints, employers’ financial constraints, and government support, in determining the level anddistribution of job losses. This provides an empirical identification of the main risk factors for job loss and abasis for predicting the level and distribution of these losses due to the crisis for permanent formal private sector(PFPS) jobs in core productive manufacturing and service sectors (captured by World Bank Enterprise Surveys) inJordan and Georgia. Comparing the empirical findings across the two countries, the paper assesses the degree ofcommonality of these risk factors. Job losses are projected for different groups within the employed population prior tothe outbreak of COVID-19 and compared with post-crisis labor force data. The results indicate that in these countries thelevel of job losses is predominantly due to a reduction in demand rather than a reduction in the supply of labor.Closures, global demand shocks, supply disruptions, and other unexplained demand-side shocks are significantdeterminants of jobs lost. The sensitivity of employment to closures, supply disruptions, and sales shocks was ofsimilar magnitudes in both countries; however, variation in infection risk was a significant determinant of sales onlyin Georgia. At the same time, Georgian formal firms were better able to rebound their sales and hire back workersthan formal firms in Jordan. Finally, the paper finds no evidence that firms with workers performing tasks that canbe performed from home were better able to preserve jobs, given the dominant role of firm-level demand and supplychain shocks.

Suggested Citation

  • Hatayama,Maho & Li,Yiruo & Osborne,Theresa Kay, 2022. "Understanding and Predicting Job Losses due to COVID-19 : Empirical Evidence from Middle Income Countries," Policy Research Working Paper Series 9933, The World Bank.
  • Handle: RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:9933
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Fairlie, Robert, 2020. "The Impact of COVID-19 on Small Business Owners: The First Three Months after Social-Distancing Restrictions," MPRA Paper 113127, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    2. Adams-Prassl, Abi & Boneva, Teodora & Golin, Marta & Rauh, Christopher, 2020. "Inequality in the impact of the coronavirus shock: Evidence from real time surveys," Journal of Public Economics, Elsevier, vol. 189(C).
    3. Hensvik, Lena & Le Barbanchon, Thomas & Rathelot, Roland, 2021. "Job search during the COVID-19 crisis," Journal of Public Economics, Elsevier, vol. 194(C).
    4. Charles Gottlieb & Jan Grobovsek & Markus Poschke, 2020. "Working from Home across Countries," Cahiers de recherche 07-2020, Centre interuniversitaire de recherche en économie quantitative, CIREQ.
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    1. World Bank & Coll-Black,Sarah & Von Lenthe,Cornelius Claus & Koettl-Brodmann,Stefanie, 2023. "Social Protection in a World of Crisis : Learning from the Response to the COVID-19 Pandemicin Eastern Europe and the South Caucasus," Social Protection Discussion Papers and Notes 183521, The World Bank.

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