WOMEN’S LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION IN ASIAN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Amarjargal Gandolgor
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Economics, Wonkwang University, Korea
Digital Object Identifier:Â
https://doi.org/10.53468/mifyr.2022.02.01.01
Abstract – One of the problems faced by SMEs is the lack of use of information technology. They are not able to build their database, which makes it impossible for them to expand their business, protect their company from risk. A survey was conducted to increase the company’s productivity and improve its financial condition using statistics from the last 27 years, selecting companies that are making a valuable contribution to the business and operating in the mining and transportation sectors. This will allow the company to expand its operations by using information technology to increase productivity and anticipate and address operational issues. This study investigates the factors that affect women’s employment in developing Asian countries and the effect of employment on economic growth. As a result, there is a lack of research on real GDP per capita and women’s employment growth have been studied and significant factors for the increase have been detected including the Asian 20 countries (Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Thailand, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam) as such these research papers during 1995-2019. The research work has been conducted based on the Asian developing 20 countries – data and the empiric analysis has done through stata16 on model 1, model 2, and model 3, respectively. There emphasized a model1 in which are women’s pre-education for school for GDP per capita as well as women’s business and legal index score, their employment in the sector of manufacturing, and woman-employer have been positively affected, on the contrary, research has determined the number of women – employees in agriculture is decreasing since the economy is raised. In model 2, there was investigated how to correlate birth growth with per capita GDP and hereby found out estimation, decreasing the birth growth since the economic advancement is definitely as for the Asian developing countries. As a result of the research, it has respectively confirmed that ammodel3, marriage status, and religious influence are negatively affected the participation rate for women’s employment, on the other hand, the birth growth, the status of the women’s business, and legal index aren’t affected to a participation rate for the women’s labor force.