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Regional Impacts
In northwest China the coal industry
and agriculture are competing for
limited land and water resources.
The traditional approach to planning
the development of each sector
independently is failing, as solutions
that optimize the outcome within
individual sectors do not necessarily
yield an optimal outcome for the
overall economy.
Researchers from IIASA and the China
University of Mining and Technology
have linked the agricultural and coal
sectors in a new model to find the
most cost efficient way of producing
enough food and energy while taking
constraints on the availability of land
and water into account.
By capturing the spatial characteristics of sub-regions, the researchers
determined how the production
sites of coal and various crops could
be reallocated to take advantage of
different climates and geographies.
They also found that implementing
water saving technologies makes
it feasible to enhance production
without increasing water demand.
The model was applied to derive the
optimal allocation of coal production
and agriculture across the Shanxi
province in China. The results show that the overall amount of crops and
coal that can be produced depends
critically on the availability of water.
This demonstrates the need to take
the variability of water supply into
account to find solutions that work
reasonably well under all availability
scenarios.
In many countries, low fertility rates and continuous
increases in life expectancy are leading to population aging.
In Asia, the four advanced economies of Hong Kong, Japan,
Singapore, and South Korea are aging particularly rapidly.
New IIASA research on the future workforce in these
societies shows that expected negative economic consequences could be alleviated by including more
highly educated women in the workforce. The adoption
of progressive policies will play an important role in this
process.
This becomes clear when comparing two scenarios: One
in which labor participation rates are kept constant at their
2010 levels over the projected period until 2050, and one in
which female participation rates similar to those of Sweden
– a role model when it comes to the economic activity levels
of women – are assumed. In this second scenario, male
participation rates are assumed to reach current Japanese
levels by 2050, which significantly increases participation
rates of older males.
The differences in total labor supply between these
two scenarios range from 9% in Japan to 28% in Korea. The
majority of the potential gains in workforce are skilled
female laborers. If their potential is properly utilized,
highly skilled females could account for over 30% of the
entire workforce in each society by 2050. This could keep
the number of non-working people per working person
constant (in Korea and Singapore), or keep the increase
at a moderate level (in Hong Kong and Japan).
Written by: Melina Filzinger
Making food
and energy
production in
China compatible
under limited
water supply
Further info: Gao J, Xu X, Cao G-Y, Ermoliev Y,
Ermolieva T, & Rovenskaya E (2018). Optimizing
Regional Food and Energy Production under
Limited Water Availability through Integrated
Modeling. Sustainability 10 (6): e1689
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/15299]
Elena Rovenskaya: rovenska@iiasa.ac.at
Further info: Loichinger E & Cheng YA (2018). Feminising the workforce in
ageing East Asia? The potential of skilled female labour in four advanced
economies. Journal of Population Research [pure.iiasa.ac.at/15278]
Elke Loichinger: loiching@iiasa.ac.at
Written by: Melina Filzinger
Feminizing the workforce
in aging East Asia ASIA
22 www.iiasa.ac.atOptions
Winter 2018/19
zurück zum
Buch options, Band winter 2018/2019"
options
Band winter 2018/2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2018/2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine