Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal

The rapid growth and transformation of global food value chains has stimulated the development of rural labour markets, and has important consequences for rural poverty reduction. While there is consensus that this transformation is associated with substantial rural employment creation, there is sti...

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Autores principales: Fabry, Anna, Van den Broeck, Goedele, Maertens, Miet
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171284
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author Fabry, Anna
Van den Broeck, Goedele
Maertens, Miet
author_browse Fabry, Anna
Maertens, Miet
Van den Broeck, Goedele
author_facet Fabry, Anna
Van den Broeck, Goedele
Maertens, Miet
author_sort Fabry, Anna
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The rapid growth and transformation of global food value chains has stimulated the development of rural labour markets, and has important consequences for rural poverty reduction. While there is consensus that this transformation is associated with substantial rural employment creation, there is still debate on the inclusiveness and quality of these jobs. We provide quantitative evidence on the quantity and inclusiveness of wage employment in the horticultural sector in Senegal, and on the quality of this employment and discrimination towards vulnerable groups of workers. We use survey data from 525 workers, 392 workers in agro-industrial companies and 133 workers on small-scale horticultural farms. We assess the inclusiveness of employment towards female, young and migrant workers, and compare the quality of employment between these groups of workers and between the agro-industrial and the small-scale farm sectors. The quality of employment is assessed through wages and a decent work index that captures multiple wage and non-wage dimensions of job quality. We use bivariate and multivariate analyses to examine quality of employment and a decomposition analysis to examine discrimination. Results suggest that the agro-industry is inclusive towards migrant, female and young workers, but that discrimination in job quality occurs within and across companies. Results illustrate substantial gender and youth wage gaps, and a lower likelihood of having decent employment among migrant and young workers. Our results suggest that discrimination, for all dimensions of job quality, is mainly indirect.
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spelling CGSpace1712842025-02-19T14:36:42Z Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal Fabry, Anna Van den Broeck, Goedele Maertens, Miet value chains employment labour labour market rural areas rural employment migration migrants remuneration horticulture agricultural value chains The rapid growth and transformation of global food value chains has stimulated the development of rural labour markets, and has important consequences for rural poverty reduction. While there is consensus that this transformation is associated with substantial rural employment creation, there is still debate on the inclusiveness and quality of these jobs. We provide quantitative evidence on the quantity and inclusiveness of wage employment in the horticultural sector in Senegal, and on the quality of this employment and discrimination towards vulnerable groups of workers. We use survey data from 525 workers, 392 workers in agro-industrial companies and 133 workers on small-scale horticultural farms. We assess the inclusiveness of employment towards female, young and migrant workers, and compare the quality of employment between these groups of workers and between the agro-industrial and the small-scale farm sectors. The quality of employment is assessed through wages and a decent work index that captures multiple wage and non-wage dimensions of job quality. We use bivariate and multivariate analyses to examine quality of employment and a decomposition analysis to examine discrimination. Results suggest that the agro-industry is inclusive towards migrant, female and young workers, but that discrimination in job quality occurs within and across companies. Results illustrate substantial gender and youth wage gaps, and a lower likelihood of having decent employment among migrant and young workers. Our results suggest that discrimination, for all dimensions of job quality, is mainly indirect. 2020 2025-01-29T12:57:57Z 2025-01-29T12:57:57Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171284 en Open Access Fabry, Anna; Van den Broeck, Goedele; and Maertens, Miet. 2020. Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal. Presented at the 3rd Annual IZA/World Bank/NJD/UNU-WIDER Jobs and Development Conference: Better Jobs for Development, September 1-4, 2020. http://conference.iza.org/conference_files/worldbank_2020/fabry_a29535.pdf
spellingShingle value chains
employment
labour
labour market
rural areas
rural employment
migration
migrants
remuneration
horticulture
agricultural value chains
Fabry, Anna
Van den Broeck, Goedele
Maertens, Miet
Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title_full Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title_fullStr Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title_full_unstemmed Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title_short Decent work in global food value chains: Evidence from Senegal
title_sort decent work in global food value chains evidence from senegal
topic value chains
employment
labour
labour market
rural areas
rural employment
migration
migrants
remuneration
horticulture
agricultural value chains
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171284
work_keys_str_mv AT fabryanna decentworkinglobalfoodvaluechainsevidencefromsenegal
AT vandenbroeckgoedele decentworkinglobalfoodvaluechainsevidencefromsenegal
AT maertensmiet decentworkinglobalfoodvaluechainsevidencefromsenegal