Salarios reales no repuntan
Fecha
2024-10
Autores
Solano Gutiérrez, Guillermo
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Universidad Nacional
Resumen
Desde 2005 Costa Rica experimenta un crecimiento en la productividad laboral en casi todas sus actividades económicas; sin embargo, desde 2019 se evidencia un distanciamiento entre dicho incremento y los salarios reales que perciben las personas trabajadoras.
Para Ricardo Monge, presidente de la Academia de Centroamérica e invitado por el Centro Internacional de Política Económica para el Desarrollo Sostenible (Cinpe-UNA) a la lección inaugural del segundo ciclo del doctorado en Política Económica, el desacoplamiento entre productividad laboral y salarios se debe principalmente a la caída en la participación laboral.
Since 2005 Costa Rica has experienced a growth in labor productivity in almost all its economic activities; however, since 2019 there is evidence of a gap between this increase and the real wages received by working people. For Ricardo Monge, president of the Academy of Central America and invited by the International Center for Economic Policy for Sustainable Development (Cinpe-UNA) to the inaugural lecture of the second cycle of the PhD in Economic Policy, the decoupling between labor productivity and wages is mainly due to the fall in labor participation.
Since 2005 Costa Rica has experienced a growth in labor productivity in almost all its economic activities; however, since 2019 there is evidence of a gap between this increase and the real wages received by working people. For Ricardo Monge, president of the Academy of Central America and invited by the International Center for Economic Policy for Sustainable Development (Cinpe-UNA) to the inaugural lecture of the second cycle of the PhD in Economic Policy, the decoupling between labor productivity and wages is mainly due to the fall in labor participation.
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CRECIMIENTO, PRODUCTIVIDAD, SALARIOS REALES, DESEMPLEO, POBREZA, GROWTH, PRODUCTIVITY, REAL WAGES, UNEMPLOYMENT, POVERTY