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PRWP

Reproducibility package for Beyond Green Jobs: Advancing Metrics And Modelling Approaches For A Changing Labor Market

2025
Reference ID
RR_WLD_2025_477
Author(s)
Penelope Mealy, Camilla Knudsen, Joris Bucker, Fernanda Senra de Moura
Collections
World Bank Policy Research Working Papers
Metadata
JSON
Created on
Nov 18, 2025
Last modified
Nov 18, 2025
  • Project Description
  • Overview
  • Reproducibility Package
  • Description
  • Scope and coverage
  • Disclaimer
  • Access and rights
  • Contacts
  • Information on metadata
  • Overview

    Abstract

    NOTE: THE REPRODUCIBILITY REVIEW FOR THIS PACKAGE IS IN PROGRESS.

    The concept of “green jobs” has received widespread attention in academic, policy, and public discourse, reflecting the growing emphasis on sustainability and the transition to a low-carbon economy. However, defining and measuring green jobs remains analytically challenging and highly sensitive to methodological choices. This paper demonstrates that depending on classification criteria and data aggregation approaches, the share of occupations identified as ‘green’ can range from just 4 percent to as high as 74 percent, raising concerns about the comparability and usefulness of green job estimates in practice. Moving beyond the traditional “green jobs” framing, the paper proposes a more pragmatic and flexible approach that focuses on identifying ‘jobs-in-demand’ and ‘jobs-at-risk’ under specific transition scenarios. This approach allows for application across different country contexts, different transition scenarios and can also incorporate other structural labor market shocks, such as technological change or demographic shifts. The paper also reviews methodologies for analyzing labor re-allocation in the context of a given labor market shock, highlighting the advantages and disadvantages of relying on historical job transition patterns compared to more forward-looking task and skill similarity measures. It discusses key challenges in integrating labor market dynamics into macroeconomic models and highlights emerging efforts in hybrid modeling that combine macroeconomic frameworks with micro-level labor market insights. The paper concludes by outlining priority areas for future research and methodological development.

    Reproducibility Package

    Scripts
    Reproducibility package for Beyond Green Jobs: Advancing Metrics And Modelling Approaches For A Changing Labor Market
    File name
    RR_WLD_2025_477
    Zip package
    RR_WLD_2025_477.zip
    Title
    Reproducibility package for Beyond Green Jobs: Advancing Metrics And Modelling Approaches For A Changing Labor Market
    Date
    2025-11
    Instructions
    See README in reproducibility package.
    Notes
    Computational reproducibility verified by Development Impact (DECDI) Analytics team, World Bank.
    Source code repository
    Repository name URI
    Reproducible Research Repository (World Bank) https://reproducibility.worldbank.org
    Software
    Python
    Name
    Python
    Excel
    Name
    Excel

    Data

    Data statement

    Some data is restricted and has not been included in the reproducibility package. For more details, please refer to the README file. (Limited-access/Restricted Data)

    Description

    Output
    Beyond Green Jobs: Advancing Metrics And Modelling Approaches For A Changing Labor Market
    Type
    Working Paper
    Title
    Beyond Green Jobs: Advancing Metrics And Modelling Approaches For A Changing Labor Market
    Description
    Policy Research Working Papers (PRWP)
    Authors
    Author Affiliation Email
    Penelope Mealy World Bank pmealy@worldbank.org
    Camilla Knudsen World Bank cknudsen@worldbank.org
    Joris Bucker World Bank bucker@worldbank.org
    Fernanda Senra de Moura World Bank fmoura@worldbank.org
    Date of production

    2025-11-18

    Scope and coverage

    Geographic locations
    Location Code
    World WLD
    Keywords
    Green Jobs Labor Mobility Labor Market Modelling Structural Change Just Transition
    Topics
    ID Topic Parent topic ID Vocabulary Vocabulary URI
    J21 Labor Force and Employment, Size, and Structure J2 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)
    J24 Human Capital • Skills • Occupational Choice • Labor Productivity J2 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)
    J62 Job, Occupational, and Intergenerational Mobility J6 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)
    Q52 Pollution Control Adoption and Costs • Distributional Effects • Employment Effects Q5 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)
    Q56 Environment and Development • Environment and Trade • Sustainability • Environmental Accounts and Accounting • Environmental Equity • Population Growth Q5 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)

    Disclaimer

    Disclaimer

    The materials in the reproducibility packages are distributed as they were prepared by the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this event do not necessarily reflect the views of the World Bank, the Executive Directors of the World Bank, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the materials included in the reproducibility package.

    Access and rights

    License
    Name URI
    Modified BSD3 https://opensource.org/license/bsd-3-clause/

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email
    Penelope Mealy World Bank pmealy@worldbank.org
    Reproducibility WBG World Bank reproducibility@worldbank.org

    Information on metadata

    Producers
    Name Abbreviation Affiliation Role
    Reproducibility WBG DECDI World Bank - Development Impact Department Verification and preparation of metadata
    Date of Production

    2025-11-18

    Document version

    1

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