Disguised Unemployment ^hot^ <Cross-Platform>

By [Author Name]

In many developing economies, civil service jobs are seen as social safety nets. A district office might have seven clerks where two would suffice. They shuffle paper, drink chai, and “look busy.” Their salary is a transfer payment disguised as a wage. Remove five clerks, and the tax forms still get processed by Friday. disguised unemployment

They are the hidden idle. They are working, yet not working. And until we learn to see them, our economies will remain far weaker—and far crueler—than the headlines admit. End of feature By [Author Name] In many developing economies, civil

The tragedy is not that these people are lazy. Far from it. They often work grueling hours. The tragedy is that their labor is structurally redundant. They are trapped in a system where the only thing more wasteful than employing them would be firing them—because there is nowhere else for them to go. 1. The Family Farm (The Classic Case) In India, Ethiopia, and rural Vietnam, agriculture remains the biggest sponge for disguised unemployment. When a family’s landholding is tiny, splitting it among four sons creates four marginal farms. Each son works his plot, but the aggregate output is no higher than if one son worked all the land. The other three are effectively hidden from unemployment statistics. Remove five clerks, and the tax forms still

Economists first identified the phenomenon in subsistence agriculture. Picture a family rice paddy in parts of South or Southeast Asia. The father, three sons, two daughters, and a cousin all rise at dawn. They wade into the mud. They plant, tend, and harvest. But if you removed two of them, the harvest would remain exactly the same. The remaining workers would simply adjust their pace.

This is . It is the economic equivalent of a fever that doesn’t show up on a thermometer. And right now, it is quietly bleeding productivity from emerging economies, rural regions, and even the back offices of modern corporations. The Chameleon of the Labor Market Unlike the jarring shock of a layoff or the grim statistic of a recession-era jobless rate, disguised unemployment wears a mask. It looks like work. It feels like work. But it isn’t productive work.

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