Sri Lanka; Selected Issues
This Selected Issues paper on Sri Lanka underlies the dynamics of growth and external competitiveness. The slowdown in the contribution of sectors that are labor intensive, together with faster growth in sectors that are capital intensive and have higher productivity levels, resulted in total factor productivity (TFP) as the main contributor to growth. Sri Lanka’s strong growth performance has brought positive benefits to the economy and has benefited from a high quality labor force. The labor productivity is low by regional standards and the internal terms of trade are skewed toward the nontraded sector.
Year of publication: |
2007-12-03
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Credit expansion | Economic growth | Selected issues | unemployment | growth accounting | real gdp | gdp growth | employment | rate of unemployment | total factor productivity | capital formation | economic growth performance | gross fixed capital formation | fixed capital formation | gdp per capita | nairu | labor migration | employed person | employment rate | natural rate of unemployment | unemployment rate | skilled labor | labor force data | per capita income | rates of unemployment | growth rate | foreign employment | growth rates | employment growth | unemployed |
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