Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon
This paper investigates the relationship between location, agglomeration, access to credit, informality, and productivity across cities and industries in Cameroon. Emphasizing the link between micro-foundations and the data, the paper develops and estimates a structural model of occupational choice in which heterogeneous agents choose between formal entrepreneurship, informal entrepreneurship, and non-entrepreneurial work. Their decision-making process is driven by institutional constraints such as entry costs, tax enforcement, and access to credit. The model predicts that agglomeration has a non-monotonic effect on formalization, and entrepreneurial profits increase with agglomeration effects. Estimating the model by the generalized method of moments, the paper finds that the returns to capital and labor are not uniform across sectors and cities. Manufacturing industries are highly constrained in capital and the elasticity of capital is higher in Yaoundé and Douala, whereas labor elasticity is higher in Kribi. Counterfactual simulations show that an increase in roads provision can have a substantial impact in terms of output, formalization, and productivity. A reduction in the current interest rate has a large and significant impact on formalization and no significant effect on business creation. Likewise, while the current tax rate is suboptimal for most cities, a tax reduction policy would have a much greater impact on formalization than on business creation. These effects differ substantially across cities and sectors, suggesting that those policy instruments could be implemented accordingly to support formalization and business creation.
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2018-07
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Subjects: | ACCESS TO CREDIT, ACCESS TO FINANCE, INFORMALITY, PRODUCTIVITY, LABOR MARKET, LABOR SKILLS, OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY, OCCUPATION, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, LABOR ELASTICITY, ROADS, ROAD QUALITY, ROAD DENSITY, TAX RATE, INTEREST RATE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, BUSINESS CREATION, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/604141531245135339/Spatial-and-sectoral-heterogeneity-of-occupational-choice-in-Cameroon https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29988 |
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dig-okr-10986299882024-08-09T07:41:42Z Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon Bougna, Theophile Nguimkeu, Pierre ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION This paper investigates the relationship between location, agglomeration, access to credit, informality, and productivity across cities and industries in Cameroon. Emphasizing the link between micro-foundations and the data, the paper develops and estimates a structural model of occupational choice in which heterogeneous agents choose between formal entrepreneurship, informal entrepreneurship, and non-entrepreneurial work. Their decision-making process is driven by institutional constraints such as entry costs, tax enforcement, and access to credit. The model predicts that agglomeration has a non-monotonic effect on formalization, and entrepreneurial profits increase with agglomeration effects. Estimating the model by the generalized method of moments, the paper finds that the returns to capital and labor are not uniform across sectors and cities. Manufacturing industries are highly constrained in capital and the elasticity of capital is higher in Yaoundé and Douala, whereas labor elasticity is higher in Kribi. Counterfactual simulations show that an increase in roads provision can have a substantial impact in terms of output, formalization, and productivity. A reduction in the current interest rate has a large and significant impact on formalization and no significant effect on business creation. Likewise, while the current tax rate is suboptimal for most cities, a tax reduction policy would have a much greater impact on formalization than on business creation. These effects differ substantially across cities and sectors, suggesting that those policy instruments could be implemented accordingly to support formalization and business creation. 2018-07-16T13:29:24Z 2018-07-16T13:29:24Z 2018-07 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/604141531245135339/Spatial-and-sectoral-heterogeneity-of-occupational-choice-in-Cameroon https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29988 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8515 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC |
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topic |
ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION Bougna, Theophile Nguimkeu, Pierre Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
description |
This paper investigates the relationship
between location, agglomeration, access to credit,
informality, and productivity across cities and industries
in Cameroon. Emphasizing the link between micro-foundations
and the data, the paper develops and estimates a structural
model of occupational choice in which heterogeneous agents
choose between formal entrepreneurship, informal
entrepreneurship, and non-entrepreneurial work. Their
decision-making process is driven by institutional
constraints such as entry costs, tax enforcement, and access
to credit. The model predicts that agglomeration has a
non-monotonic effect on formalization, and entrepreneurial
profits increase with agglomeration effects. Estimating the
model by the generalized method of moments, the paper finds
that the returns to capital and labor are not uniform across
sectors and cities. Manufacturing industries are highly
constrained in capital and the elasticity of capital is
higher in Yaoundé and Douala, whereas labor elasticity is
higher in Kribi. Counterfactual simulations show that an
increase in roads provision can have a substantial impact in
terms of output, formalization, and productivity. A
reduction in the current interest rate has a large and
significant impact on formalization and no significant
effect on business creation. Likewise, while the current tax
rate is suboptimal for most cities, a tax reduction policy
would have a much greater impact on formalization than on
business creation. These effects differ substantially across
cities and sectors, suggesting that those policy instruments
could be implemented accordingly to support formalization
and business creation. |
format |
Working Paper |
topic_facet |
ACCESS TO CREDIT ACCESS TO FINANCE INFORMALITY PRODUCTIVITY LABOR MARKET LABOR SKILLS OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP LABOR ELASTICITY ROADS ROAD QUALITY ROAD DENSITY TAX RATE INTEREST RATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS CREATION |
author |
Bougna, Theophile Nguimkeu, Pierre |
author_facet |
Bougna, Theophile Nguimkeu, Pierre |
author_sort |
Bougna, Theophile |
title |
Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
title_short |
Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
title_full |
Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
title_fullStr |
Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
title_full_unstemmed |
Spatial and Sectoral Heterogeneity of Occupational Choice in Cameroon |
title_sort |
spatial and sectoral heterogeneity of occupational choice in cameroon |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018-07 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/604141531245135339/Spatial-and-sectoral-heterogeneity-of-occupational-choice-in-Cameroon https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29988 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bougnatheophile spatialandsectoralheterogeneityofoccupationalchoiceincameroon AT nguimkeupierre spatialandsectoralheterogeneityofoccupationalchoiceincameroon |
_version_ |
1807160189240999936 |