Pathways to Prosperity: An e-Symposium

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Blog #8: In building and agri boom, rural wage lift

India is home to the largest number of poor people in the world, as well as the largest number of people who have recently escaped poverty. Over the next few weeks, this blog series will highlight recent research from the World Bank and its partners on what has driven poverty reduction, what still stands in the way of progress, and the road to a more prosperous India.

We hope this will spark a conversation around #WhatWillItTake to #EndPoverty in India. Read all the blogs in this series, we look forward to your comments. 

Real wages have risen across India in the past two decades, but the increase was especially marked among rural unskilled workers. Three drivers – falling rural female labor force participation, a construction boom, and favorable agricultural terms of trade -- help explain why unskilled rural workers fared better than their urban counterparts or workers with more education. Going forward, in light of lower agricultural prices and slower growth in the construction sector, some of the factors that contributed to the increase in relative wages for unskilled labor during this period may not be sustained over time. 

Over the last two decades, India’s workers have seen their wages rise substantially relative to the cost of living. Although real wages have risen across all of India and for all demographic groups (educated/uneducated, old/young, male/female), the rise has been especially marked among the rural unskilled workers – those with less than full secondary education. This was particularly so between 2004/05 and 2011/12.  While this phenomenon helps explain the fall in rural poverty during this period, it begs the question: what were the economic forces that drove the rise in real wages during this time? 
 
To answer this question it helps to narrow it, by shifting our gaze from the overall rising-tide of higher real wages nationwide and asking instead why some “boats” have risen faster than others; for example, why the wages of rural workers lacking secondary education (concentrated in sectors like agriculture and construction) have risen faster than those of their urban counterparts.  Here are three key findings on how the relative wages of different groups have changed between 2004/05 and 2011/12:
 
First, an expanding construction sector stands out as the key driver of relative wage growth for unskilled men. States in which the rural construction sector grew faster than the urban construction sector, such as Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka, saw faster relative wage growth for men with less than complete secondary education.  What this means is that the wages of these men grew faster in rural areas of the state than in urban areas.  There is no such effect on women’s wages.  In contrast to the construction sector, relative growth in services, such as wholesale and resale trade, is unrelated to relative wages for either males or females. 
 
Second, falling female labor force participation has played a role in helping raise wages, but only for women. States in which rural women withdrew from the labor force faster than urban women experienced a greater rise in the wages of rural unskilled women.  This pattern is essentially absent for males, suggesting that women’s unskilled labor is not a very close substitute for that of men.
 
Third, states that grew crops whose prices rose more sharply during the 2004/05-11/12 period saw rural wages for unskilled labor, both male and female, rise faster than urban wages.  Thus, against the backdrop of the overall decline in agricultural employment in India, states that benefitted from the agricultural commodity boom saw a greater demand for farm labor, and hence rising wages for unskilled farm work.
 
While we cannot run a statistical `horserace’ to find the dominant force behind the recent changes in India’s relative wage structure, these three drivers do help us understand why unskilled rural workers have fared better than their urban counterparts.  Going forward, in light of the recent moderation in agricultural prices and slower growth in the construction sector, it is already clear that some of the factors that contributed to the increase in relative wages for unskilled labor during this period may not be sustained over time.  As a matter of fact, the rate of growth in real wages has slowed over the past few years, with potential implications for the pace of poverty reduction in the country.
 

 Changing wage structure in India during 1993/94-2011/12.
Figure: Changing wage structure in India during 1993/94-2011/12
Note
: “Educated” workers refers to those who completed secondary school or above. m – male; f – female.
Source: Authors’ Calculation from various rounds of NSSO data

 

 
Note: Split states clubbed with parent states.
Source: Authors’ Calculation from various rounds of NSSO data


 
These findings are based on a standard decomposition of wage growth into growth due to supply shifts (changing group employment shares), growth due to demand shifts (changing industrial composition biased for or against a particular group), and growth due to wage-premia shifts (essentially, movements into or out of structurally low-paying jobs).  The portion of relative wage growth attributable to these three factors can then be extracted for each state, or groups of smaller states, and finally correlated with various economic changes at the state level.  The key findings represent statistically significant correlations.
 

Reference:
Jacoby, Hanan G., and Basab Dasgupta. 2015. “Changing Wage Structure in India in the Post-Reform Era: 1993-2011.” WPS 7426, World Bank, Washington DC.


This blog was originally published in the Indian Express on 22nd June, 2016.

R C Rath
June 22, 2016

The three very interesting facts behind reducing the rural poverty- really amazing

Ashok Dave
June 26, 2016

Not in construction /agriculture sector but also effected directly or indirectly each middle class level

Shabina Hussain
December 05, 2016

This blog didn't mention the high rate of suicide among Indian rural farmers due to their inability to pay back their loans. Also the claim that women are dropping out of rural unskilled job market is highly questionable. Most of the agricultural farm labor is done by women. If they are being replaced by men then what are these women doing to make a living?

kbrmohan
May 18, 2017

suicides of farmers from atleast in seven thickly populated states in India has been high and this was acknowledged by the government before the Apex Court which was hearing a case concerning the issue. The government has to take steps for betterment of farm practices and also help the tillers to safegaurd their prestige in case of crop failures, as the industrialists being supported by the banks and other financial institutions incase of bankruptcy of an industry......

kbrmohan
May 18, 2017

Central government agreed before the apex court which was hearing a case concerning the farmers suicides that the tendency has been as high as 300 per cent since 2005 to 2015. agrarians should be supported finacially in case of croploss as industrialists are being supoorted for the bankruptcy...