Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador

This study explores how deindustrialization is influencing the labour market in El Salvador. The variables under analysis are disaggregated by sex in order to permit an analysis of the differences in the ways that women and men react to deindustrialization. The results indicate that deindustrializat...

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Autor principal: Cáceres, Luis René
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44324
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spelling oai-11362-443242019-08-09T17:25:19Z Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador Cáceres, Luis René DESINDUSTRIALIZACION EMPLEO MERCADO DE TRABAJO AUTOEMPLEO EMPLEO A TIEMPO PARCIAL PROBLEMAS SOCIALES VIOLENCIA IGUALDAD DE GENERO MODELOS ECONOMETRICOS DEINDUSTRIALIZATION EMPLOYMENT LABOUR MARKET SELF-EMPLOYMENT PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT SOCIAL PROBLEMS VIOLENCE GENDER EQUALITY ECONOMETRIC MODELS This study explores how deindustrialization is influencing the labour market in El Salvador. The variables under analysis are disaggregated by sex in order to permit an analysis of the differences in the ways that women and men react to deindustrialization. The results indicate that deindustrialization has led to a decline in quality employment and an upswing in self-employment, at the same time that the female labour force participation rate has risen and the male participation rate has fallen. This all occurred in parallel with the economic measures introduced in the 1990s and reflects the role that women have assumed in order to safeguard the well-being of their families. Deindustrialization has also been associated with increasing violence, since it paves the way for an increase in poor-quality jobs. This article concludes by underscoring the importance of reinstating tariff protections and supporting a reindustrialization process, together with regional integration, gender equality and education. 2018-12-18T20:40:38Z 2018-12-18T20:40:38Z 2018-08-18 Texto Sección o Parte de un Documento http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44324 LC/PUB.2018/6-P 9 en CEPAL Review CEPAL Review 125 .pdf application/pdf EL SALVADOR EL SALVADOR
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic DESINDUSTRIALIZACION
EMPLEO
MERCADO DE TRABAJO
AUTOEMPLEO
EMPLEO A TIEMPO PARCIAL
PROBLEMAS SOCIALES
VIOLENCIA
IGUALDAD DE GENERO
MODELOS ECONOMETRICOS
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOUR MARKET
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
VIOLENCE
GENDER EQUALITY
ECONOMETRIC MODELS
spellingShingle DESINDUSTRIALIZACION
EMPLEO
MERCADO DE TRABAJO
AUTOEMPLEO
EMPLEO A TIEMPO PARCIAL
PROBLEMAS SOCIALES
VIOLENCIA
IGUALDAD DE GENERO
MODELOS ECONOMETRICOS
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOUR MARKET
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
VIOLENCE
GENDER EQUALITY
ECONOMETRIC MODELS
Cáceres, Luis René
Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
description This study explores how deindustrialization is influencing the labour market in El Salvador. The variables under analysis are disaggregated by sex in order to permit an analysis of the differences in the ways that women and men react to deindustrialization. The results indicate that deindustrialization has led to a decline in quality employment and an upswing in self-employment, at the same time that the female labour force participation rate has risen and the male participation rate has fallen. This all occurred in parallel with the economic measures introduced in the 1990s and reflects the role that women have assumed in order to safeguard the well-being of their families. Deindustrialization has also been associated with increasing violence, since it paves the way for an increase in poor-quality jobs. This article concludes by underscoring the importance of reinstating tariff protections and supporting a reindustrialization process, together with regional integration, gender equality and education.
format Texto
author Cáceres, Luis René
author_facet Cáceres, Luis René
author_sort Cáceres, Luis René
title Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
title_short Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
title_full Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
title_fullStr Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
title_full_unstemmed Deindustrialization, labour and violence in El Salvador
title_sort deindustrialization, labour and violence in el salvador
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/44324
work_keys_str_mv AT caceresluisrene deindustrializationlabourandviolenceinelsalvador
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