000 01554pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aRama, Martin
245 _aThe gender implications of public sector downsizing: the reform program of Vietnam
260 _c2002
300 _ap.167-89.
362 _aFall
520 _aUsing data from Vietnam, this article describes several types of analysis that could be conducted before launching a major downsizing operation to identify possible gender effects. It draws several conclusions about Vietnam's downsizing reforms. First, although women's prospects of obtaining salaried jobs following displacement from state-owned enterprise worsened as a result of recent reforms, they are likely to improve in the near future. Second, reforms are associated with a sharp decline in the gender gap in earnings, both in and outside the state sector. Third, overstaffing is greatest in sectors in which most employees are men, such as construction, mining, and transportation; it is much less prevalent in sectors in which women dominate the workforce, such as footwear, textiles, and garments. Fourth, training and assistance programs currently in place to help redundant workers reveal no evidence of strong gender bias. Fifth, severance packages based on a multiple of earnings are more favourable to men, whereas lumpsum packages favor women. - Reproduced.
650 _aAdministrative reform - Vietnam
650 _aAdministrative reform
773 _aWorld Bank Research Observer
909 _a54716
999 _c54716
_d54716