Direct, indirect, and induced employment

Investments into an industry or project can produce temporary and long-term employment. The resulting jobs are typically categorized as being one of three types. A direct job is employment created to fulfill the demand for a product or service.[1] An indirect job is a job that exists to produce the goods and services needed by the workers with direct jobs.[1][2] Indirect employment includes the things need direct on the job as well as jobs produced because of the worker's needs (e.g., uniforms). Employment created by the additional personal spending (e.g., eating at a restaurant) by both direct and indirect workers is classified as an induced job.

Projects may produce temporary and long-term jobs.[1] Construction and installation jobs may be temporary. Operations and maintenance jobs tend to be long term.

Examples

Project Direct jobs Indirect jobs Induced jobs
Use wind turbines[1] Employees manufacturing wind turbines
  • Employees at a steel mill that supplies the wind turbine factory
  • Employees producing energy used by the steel mill
  • Employees at a factory that makes the screws used in wind turbines
  • Restaurant staff[3]
  • Child care workers[3]
  • Grocery store jobs
  • Clothing store jobs
  • Recreation and entertainment jobs
Build a water treatment facility[2]
  • Construction workers building the facility
  • Employees operating equipment at the facility
  • Employees at a factory that makes chemicals used at the facility
  • Workers who wash the facility's uniforms at an industrial laundry
Tourism[4] Service job selling tickets to a park
Retrofitting buildings to be energy efficient[5] Construction job to install new heating system
  • Employees who manufacture building supplies
  • Employees who assemble heating systems

Efficiency of job production

Investments in some projects or industries are more efficient at producing direct and indirect jobs. For example, investing US$1,000,000 in the petroleum industry produces fewer direct and indirect jobs than investing the same amount of money in renewable energy or energy efficiency.[6]

A special economic zone produces fewer indirect jobs if it is isolated from the country's main economy, and more if it is well integrated.[7] For example, the special economic zone in the Dominican Republic provided 166,000 formal direct jobs plus 250,000 indirect jobs in 2017.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Estache, Antonio; Ianchovichina, Elena; Bacon, Robert; Salamon, Ilhem (2013-02-20). Infrastructure and Employment Creation in the Middle East and North Africa. World Bank Publications. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8213-9666-7.
  2. ^ a b UNESCO (2016-02-29). The United Nations world water development report 2016: water and jobs. UNESCO Publishing. p. 31. ISBN 978-92-3-100146-8.
  3. ^ a b "Can American manufacturing really be cornerstone of economic revival?". Christian Science Monitor. 2012-02-08. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  4. ^ Lake States Regional Forest Resources Assessment: Technical Papers. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 1997. p. 184.
  5. ^ Krarti, Moncef (2020-12-01). Energy Audit of Building Systems: An Engineering Approach, Third Edition. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-000-25977-3.
  6. ^ Krarti, Moncef (2020-12-01). Energy Audit of Building Systems: An Engineering Approach, Third Edition. CRC Press. p. 434. ISBN 978-1-000-25967-4.
  7. ^ a b Development, United Nations Conference on Trade and (2019-08-09). World Investment Report 2019: Special Economic Zones. United Nations. ISBN 978-92-1-004158-4. In 2017, SEZs provided about 166,000 direct jobs and an estimated 250,000 indirect ones, the majority of which were still low-skilled workers (blue collar, 71 per cent), even though the share of technical workers has steadily grown since 2012.
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