Abstract

Long-standing challenges concerning unemployment and the role of government have been the dominant underlying themes in the countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. Effective State-Business Relations (SBRs) comprise a set of highly responsive and public interactions between the state and the business sector. The aim of this study is to explore the dynamics of net job creation rates in Egypt and Turkey, and the role of the SBRs, including various firm characteristics. The analysis relies on firm-level data derived from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys over the period 2008–2013. We implement the weighted ordinary least squares (OLS). Furthermore, we apply an Instrumental Variables (IV) Approach and the Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) method for robustness check, to deal with the potential endogeneity issues coming from the self-reported statements and the possible degree of reverse causality between SBRs and the main outcomes of interest. Our findings suggest four major obstacles to SBRs, with constraints of access to finance and credit and political instability being the common major obstacles in the two countries explored. Corruption and lack of proper infrastructure in electricity in Egypt are found to be the next two main obstacles in SBRs, while tax rates and competition from the informal sector are identified as the other two main obstacles in Turkey. The results show that obstacles in SBRs contribute negatively to the net job creation. According to these findings, policy implications include the need to make SBRs operate more efficiently, investments on proper infrastructure and policies that minimize corruption and political instability.

Highlights

  • Employment growth, job creation and destruction and firm productivity have been always at the centre of interest of the governments around the globe and especially in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, after the great recession of 2007

  • This study investigated the determinants of job flows in Egypt and Turkey and the impact of State-Business Relations (SBRs) on job flows

  • Effective SBRs and a supportive business environment is vital for the firm performance, innovation and job creation

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Summary

Introduction

Employment growth, job creation and destruction and firm productivity have been always at the centre of interest of the governments around the globe and especially in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, after the great recession of 2007. While labor supply factors can be important, such as skills, working experience, education and health; yet, job reallocation is one of the main factors behind workers’ relocation activity. Evidence for this can be economic stagnation in the transition and developing economies, which cannot be explained only by the labor supply-side factors

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