Informality Trends and Cycles

This paper studies the trends and cycles of informal employment. It first presents a theoretical model where the size of informal employment is determined by the relative costs and benefits of informality and the distribution of workers' skills. In the long run, informal employment varies with the trends in these variables, and in the short run it reacts to accommodate transient shocks and to close the gap that separates it from its trend level. The paper then uses an error-correction framework to examine empirically informality's long- and short-run relationships. For this purpose, it uses country-level data at annual frequency for a sample of industrial and developing countries, with the share of self-employment in the labor force as the proxy for informal employment. The paper finds that, in the long run, informality is larger in countries that have lower GDP per capita and impose more costs to formal firms in the form of more rigid business regulations, less valuable police and judicial services, and weaker monitoring of informality. In the short run, informal employment is found to be counter-cyclical for the majority of countries, with the degree of counter-cyclicality being lower in countries with larger informal employment and better police and judicial services. Moreover, informal employment follows a stable, trend-reverting process. These results are robust to changes in the sample and to the influence of outliers, even when only developing countries are considered in the analysis.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Loayza, Norman V., Rigolini, Jamele
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-12
Subjects:ABSOLUTE DIFFERENCE, ACTIVE LABOR, ADVERSE SELECTION, AGGREGATE OUTPUT, BUSINESS CYCLE, COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS, COUNTRY CHARACTERISTICS, COUNTRY DUMMY, COUNTRY-BY-COUNTRY BASIS, CUMULATIVE FUNCTION, DATA SET, DEPENDENT VARIABLE, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DISCUSSIONS, DISEQUILIBRIUM, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELASTICITY, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, EMPIRICAL FINDINGS, EMPIRICAL MODEL, EMPIRICAL SECTION, EMPLOYMENT GROWTH, EMPLOYMENT RATE, ENTRY COSTS, EQUILIBRIUM, EQUILIBRIUM LEVEL, EXOGENOUS VARIABLE, EXPLANATORY POWER, EXPLANATORY VARIABLE, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES, GROSS INCOME, GROWTH RATE, INCOME, INCOME LEVELS, INEQUALITY, INFORMAL ECONOMIES, INFORMAL ECONOMY, INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT, INFORMAL LABOR MARKETS, INFORMAL SECTOR, INTEREST RATES, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LABOR ORGANIZATION, LABOR TURNOVER, LATIN AMERICAN, LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM, LONG-RUN GROWTH, MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS, MARGINAL COST, MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES, MINIMUM WAGE, MINIMUM WAGES, MONETARY ECONOMICS, MORAL HAZARD, NATIONAL INCOME, NEGATIVE SHOCKS, NEGATIVE SIGN, OPPORTUNITY COST, PER CAPITA GROWTH, POLICY RESEARCH, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POSITIVE SHOCKS, PREVIOUS SECTION, PRIVATE AGENTS, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY DIFFERENTIAL, PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES, PRODUCTIVITY LEVEL, PUBLIC ECONOMICS, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SERVICES, REAL EXCHANGE RATE, RELATIVE EARNINGS, SELF EMPLOYED, SELF EMPLOYED WORKERS, SELF EMPLOYMENT, SERIES DATA, SERIES OBSERVATIONS, SKILL LEVEL, SMALL MANUFACTURING, TAXATION, TOTAL EMPLOYMENT, TOTAL WORKERS, WORK IN PROGRESS, WORKER, WORKERS, WORKING,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/12/7245835/informality-trends-cycles
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8855
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