The industrialization of developing countries has fundamentally transformed work, employment, and labor for millions. Despite the industrialization of most of the developing world, we present evidence that Latin America has experienced stagnating industrial employment in the past few decades. Benefiting from recently available data on industrial employment as a percentage of total employment from 1980 through 2006, we analyze fixed-effects models for 20 Latin American countries. Specifically, we examine three theoretical explanations: productivity/comparative advantage, institutionalism, and dependency/world-systems. Our analyses demonstrate that the prevailing productivity/comparative advantage explanation has limited value. By contrast, w...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
This article analyses the structural changes in Latin Ameri-can industry, which speeded up in the 19...
After a decade of strong growth and notable poverty and inequality reduction, Latin America finds it...
The industrialization of developing countries has fundamentally transformed work, employment, and la...
The low pace of Latin American productivity growth in recent decades, despite extensive economic ref...
The low pace of Latin American productivity growth in recent decades, despite extensive economic ref...
Includes bibliographyTrade liberalization, deregulation of economic activity, the privatization of p...
This paper analyzes the long-run relationship between labor share and its determinants for 20 Latin ...
This book examines the links between economic growth, changing employment conditions, and the reduct...
We analyse the evolution of Manufacturing Value-Added per inhabitant in 20 Latin American and Caribb...
Using sectoral growth accounting techniques from a structural perspective à la Lewis, the paper anal...
Most Latin American countries experienced their last peak in output per capita relative to the Unite...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
Although the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean grew more slowly in 2011 than in 2010, th...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
This article analyses the structural changes in Latin Ameri-can industry, which speeded up in the 19...
After a decade of strong growth and notable poverty and inequality reduction, Latin America finds it...
The industrialization of developing countries has fundamentally transformed work, employment, and la...
The low pace of Latin American productivity growth in recent decades, despite extensive economic ref...
The low pace of Latin American productivity growth in recent decades, despite extensive economic ref...
Includes bibliographyTrade liberalization, deregulation of economic activity, the privatization of p...
This paper analyzes the long-run relationship between labor share and its determinants for 20 Latin ...
This book examines the links between economic growth, changing employment conditions, and the reduct...
We analyse the evolution of Manufacturing Value-Added per inhabitant in 20 Latin American and Caribb...
Using sectoral growth accounting techniques from a structural perspective à la Lewis, the paper anal...
Most Latin American countries experienced their last peak in output per capita relative to the Unite...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
Although the economies of Latin America and the Caribbean grew more slowly in 2011 than in 2010, th...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
Due to several policy distortions, including import-substitution industrialization, widespread gover...
This article analyses the structural changes in Latin Ameri-can industry, which speeded up in the 19...
After a decade of strong growth and notable poverty and inequality reduction, Latin America finds it...