Labour force market behaviour in Romania.
Botezatu, Mihai Alexandru ; Botezatu, Elena
1. INTRODUCTION
The study of the labour market begins and ends with the analysis of
supply and demand of labour. The supply of labour consists in employed
and potentially employed persons, whose decisions to enter the labour
market are influenced by several factors, including: demography,
immigration, education, social protection policies etc. Labour market is
a concept, a fictional space that gathers the supply and demand of
labour, adjusting them through salaries. The statistical size of the
supply of labour is given by the active population, employed and
unemployed.
Labour supply comes from those individuals who want or need to
obtain an income in exchange for work. It represents the amount of work
that individuals wish to sell on the market at a price called
"salary". It is expressed statistically by the number of
people of working age able and willing to work for a wage. This includes
self-employed labour--and assimilated--because it can be assumed that by
selling the result of labour--good or service--it is actually selling
labour.
Labour supply is subject to factors such as (Benoit & Sahn,
2006):
a) The population size and structure, by age group;
b) The level of wages (up to a level of salary that ensure a decent
living the employee expand the quantity of work supplied, while above
this threshold he substitutes work with leisure, thus reducing the
amount of labour provided);
c) The structure of ownership in relation to the size of income
which it brings to individual owners (the smaller they are, the larger
is the available active population);
d) The traditions, customs etc. which influence the use of the
labour force;
e) Psychological factors concerning the labour supplier.
The demand for labour comes from enterprises, whose decisions about
the employment of labour are influenced by conditions on the three
markets that operate they operate on: the capital market, the market of
goods and services and the labour market. It is also of great interest
for economic analysis and for outlining economic and employment politics
the correlation between total population and active population segment.
Labour demand shows how the employment policies of enterprises
react to changes regarding production, sales, revenue, taxation, wages
etc. (Ciobanu & Pirciog, 1999). Therefore, the demand for labour is
a derived demand (depending on the demand for the company products and
services), so this may be influenced by exogenous factors, like
technological changes, free trade and global competition. The purpose of
this study is to determine the main labour force market indicators,
their models of calculation and the interpretation of the results
concretised in recommendation for governmental policies.
2. BASIC LABOUR INDICATORS
The analysis of labour supply must be made in close connection with
the population size and structure, which in turn is directly influenced
by the level of economic development of the country, and the social
factors that characterize the community. Law no. 76/2002 regarding the
unemployment insurance system established the main statistical
indicators of the labour market. Labour demand is measured statistically
by the number of jobs in the economy (occupied and vacant). Any occupied
job presumes the existence of a contractual relationship. In addition to
the occupied jobs, the economic agents may have job vacancies. The
statistical indicator for measuring the occupied jobs is the employed
population.
Thus, one can identify several categories of statistical indicators
(Botezatu & Botezatu, 2008):
a). Absolute indicators:
* The total active population is represented by all the persons who
supply labour during the reference period, including the unemployed and
the employed population according to the criteria defined by the
International Labour Office.
* The total employed population includes all persons aged 15 and
older who had a job and who worked in the reference period at least one
hour in non-agricultural activities or more than 15 hours, for
self-employed and unpaid agriculture activities. It includes all
categories of people (employees, employers, self-employed, unpaid family
workers, members of farm cooperatives etc.) who worked in the formal
sector activities and the informal sector, with or without legal forms.
b). Relative indicators
* The overall rate of activity (R (ga)) is defined as the
proportion of total active population (P (a)) in the total population of
the country (P (t)).
R (ga) = P (a) / P (t) x 100 (1)
* The rate activity of the population above 15 years of age (R (A15
+)) is the proportion of the active population aged 15+ (p (A15 +)) in
the total population aged 15 + (P (+ t15)).
R (A15 +) = P (A15 +) / P (t15 +) x 100 (2)
* The overall employment rate R (go) is the proportion of the
employed population (P (a)) in the total population of the country (P
(t)):
R (go) = P (o) / P (t) x 100 (3)
* The rate of employment of the population above 15 years of age
R(o15+) is the proportion of the occupied population occupied aged 15+
(P (o15 +)) in the total population aged 15 + (P (t15 +)):
R (+ o15) = P (o15 +) / P (t15 +) x 100 (4)
* The rate of employment of the labour resources R (rm) is the
proportion of the employed civilian population (P (oc)) in the total
labour resources (R (m)):
R (rm) = P (oc) / R (m) x 100 (5)
* The ILO unemployment rate is calculated as the ratio between the
number of unemployed people defined according to criteria of the
International Labor Office (S (ILO)) and total active population (P
(a)), as follows:
R (ILO) = S (ILO) / P (a) x 100 (6)
* The registered unemployment rate is determined as the ratio
between the number of unemployed registered with employment agencies
(paid and not-paid) and total active civilian population. It is
calculated by the National Agency for Employment as follows:
R (NAE) = S (NAE) / P (ac) x 100 (7)
3. THE ECONOMETRIC MODEL FOR THE STUDY REGARDING THE DEMAND OF
LABOUR FORCE
Taking into account the notions previously presented, we propose
ourselves to elaborate a linear, multifactor, econometric model which
has synchronous influences for the simulation of the increase in demand
concerning the labour force in Romania within 2000-2007 (table 1). The
model for the employed population of the country presents the evolution
of this indicator in correlation to the demographic factor, total
population of the country at the "t" moment, the activity rate
of the population at the "t" moment, also according to the
economic factors represented by the savings rate of the
population's households defined as a percentage report between the
gross economy of households and their available gross income (because
the employed population is that segment of population which participates
directly in the economic activity through labour, contributing to the
development of economy) (Botezatu, 2008).
[PO.sub.t] = f ([P.sub.t], [RA.sub.t], [R.sub.Ec.pop.t]) (8)
where:
[PO.sub.t] = The employed population at the "t" moment;
[P.sub.t] = Total population of the country at the "t"
moment;
[RA.sub.t]= The activity rate at the "t" moment;
[R.sub.Ec.pop.] = savings rate for the households of the
population.
The indicators "employed population" and "savings
rate of population", resulted from model mention above using data
from table 1 are presented in figure 1 and figure 2.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
4. CONCLUSIONS
Given the psycho-social particularities of the labour force and
also the feedback relations with the other markets, the labour market is
the most sensitive and fragile of all markets. It picks up and amplifies
the distortions and dysfunctions of the other markets formulating its
own demands. So the labour market is conditioned by the equilibrium of
all the other markets and at the same time by the conditions the
socio-political equilibrium and stability.
It is noticed that, between the employed population and the total
population, the activity rate and the savings rate of the
population's households is a direct developing trend. The
determination coefficient (93,4%) indicates a strong dependency between
the employed population and the endogenous variables (total population,
activity rate and the savings rate of the population) included in the
model. Likewise, the econometric model offers efficient solutions for
the economic analysis. The references years reflect the result of many
changes in governmental and European labour market. Actual financial
crisis impose to develop new model for evaluate the market, being the
subject of next authors' research
5. REFERENCES
Benoit, D. E. & Sahn, D.E. (2006). Labor Market Dynamics in
Romania during a Period of Economic Liberalization IZA Discussion Papers
2511, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA)
Botezatu, M.A. (2008). Models For Labor Force Analysis, Journal Of
Information Systems And Operations Management, (http://JISOM.RAU.RO),
No2, July 2008, ISSN: 1843-4711, pp. 167-178
Botezatu, M. A. & Botezatu, Elena (2008). Migration Of Labour
Force In Romania, Annals of DAAAM for 2008 & Proceedings of the 19th
International DAAAM Symposium, ISSN 1726-9679, ISBN 978-3-901509-68-1
Ciobanu, & Parciog, S. (1999). Background study on employment
and labour market in Romania, Available on:
http://www.etf.eu.int/etfweb.nsf/pages/downloadromania Accesed
18.03.2009
Tab. 1. Data used for the econometric model
year Employed Total Rate of Savings
population Population active Rate (%)
(thousands) (thousands) population (%)
2000 10764 22435.2 68.6 5.5
2001 10697 22408.3 67.6 2.6
2002 9234 21794.7 63.6 -0.7
2003 9223 21735.5 62.4 -10.2
2004 9158 21673.3 63.2 -7.2
2005 9147 21623.8 62.4 -11.5
2006 9313 21584.3 63.7 -16.3
2007 9353 21537.5 63 -23.5