Working Papers

Job Accession, Separation and Mobility in the Egyptian Labor Market Over the Past Decade

No.

881

Date

November, 2014

Topic

J3. Wages, Compensation, and Labor Costs

J2. Demand and Supply of Labor

The aim of this paper is to assess to what extent is the Egyptian labor market dynamic and the impact of its dynamics on stagnant unemployment rates. By estimating annual and semiannual transition probabilities of workers among different employment sectors as well as between employment and non-employment states, the paper explores how sluggish the Egyptian labor market has been throughout the past decade, and characterizes the subcategories which suffer the most from this rigidity. In the absence of official and research statistics of these transitions in Egypt, these estimates would surely improve the monitoring of business cycles, the detection of inflection (turning) points and the assessment of labor market tightness. A unique semi-annual panel of labor market micro-data, generated from the new cross-sectional Egypt Labor Market Panel Survey 2012, is used in the analysis. Results show evidence of relatively rigid dynamics within the Egyptian labor market with a turning point in trends of job accession (job finding) and separation rates right after the financial crisis and the January 2011 uprising. Flows into and out of unemployment seem to have been affected by the slowdown of the economic growth following the Arab Spring during which separation rates almost doubled and job finding rates declined. Even after an increase in the separation rates of about one percentage point, these rates remain very low, reflecting an extremely rigid labor market. In such times of crises, unemployment rises not only because workers lose their jobs into non-employment (evidence of increasing involuntary job exits), but also because it becomes harder to find jobs, which is verified by a substantial decline in the job finding rate after 2009. Results also suggest that claims of increasing job losses after January 2011 uprising were exaggerated. Additionally, a rise in job-to-job transitions, especially among informal workers, is observed.