The Long Shadow of Informality

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C H A P T ER 4

T H E L O NG S HA D O W O F I N F O R MA L I T Y

References Abraham, R. 2019. “Informal Employment and the Structure of Wages in India: A Review of the Trends.” Review of Income and Wealth 65 (S1): S102-22. Adams, R. 2003. “Economic Growth, Inequality, and Poverty: Findings from a New Data Set.” Policy Research Working Paper 2972, World Bank, Washington, DC. Al Masri, D., V. Flamini, and F. G. Toscani. 2021. “The Short-Term Impact of COVID-19 on Labor Markets, Poverty and Inequality in Brazil.” IMF Working Paper 2166, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Ali, N., and B. Najman. 2017. “Informal competition, firms’ productivity and policy reforms in Egypt.” In The Informal Economy: Exploring Drivers and Practices, edited by I. A. Horodnic, P. Rodgers, C. C. Williams, and L. Momtazian. Abingdon, U.K.: Routledge (in press). Allen, J., and T. Schipper. 2016. “Understanding the Informal Sector: Do Formal and Informal Firms Compete?” Unpublished manuscript. Amaral, P. S., and E. Quintin. 2006. “A Competitive Model of the Informal Sector.” Journal of Monetary Economics 53 (7): 1541-53. Amarante V., R. Arim, and M. Yapor, 2016. “Decomposing Inequality Changes in Uruguay: The Role of Formalization in the Labor Market.” IZA Journal of Labor & Development 5 (1): 1-20. Amin, M., and X. Huang. 2014. “Does Firm-Size Matter in the Informal Sector?” Enterprise Note 28, World Bank, Washington, DC. Amin, M., and A. Islam. 2015. “Are Large Informal Firms More Productive than the Small Informal Firms? Evidence from Firm-Level Surveys in Africa.” World Development 74 (C): 374-85. Amin, M., F. Ohnsorge, and C. Okou. 2019. “Casting a Shadow: Productivity of Formal Firms and Informality.” Policy Research Working Paper 8945, World Bank, Washington, DC. Amin, M., and C. Okou. 2020. “Casting a Shadow: Productivity of Formal Firms and Informality.” Review of Development Economics 24 (4): 1610-30. Amuedo-Dorantes, C. 2004. “Determinants and Poverty Implications of Informal Sector Work in Chile.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 52 (2): 347-68. Arias, O., and M. Khamis. 2008. “Comparative Advantage, Segmentation and Informal Earnings: A Marginal Treatment Effects Approach.” IZA Discussion Paper 3916, Institute for the Study of Labor, Bonn, Germany. Ariza, J., and G. Montes-Rojas. 2017. “Labour Income Inequality and the Informal Sector in Colombian Cities.” Cuadernos de Economía 36 (72): 77-98. Attanasio, O., P. Goldberg, and N. Pavcnik. 2004. “Trade Reforms and Wage Inequality in Colombia.” Journal of Development Economics 74 (2): 331-66. Auriol, E., and M. Walters. 2005. “Taxation Base in Developing Countries.” Journal of Public Economics 89 (4): 625-46. Autor, D. and Reynolds, E., 2020. “The Nature of Work after the COVID Crisis: Too Few Low-Wage Jobs.” The Hamilton Project, Brookings Institution, Washington, DC.


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Articles inside

References

17min
pages 344-353

Annex 6A Policies and informality

3min
pages 323-324

Fiscal measures

2min
page 301

Data and methodology

2min
page 300

6.1 Financial development and the informal economy

9min
pages 290-294

6.8 Informality after labor market reforms in EMDEs

2min
page 313

Conclusion

2min
page 271

References

20min
pages 272-284

Conclusion

2min
page 319

Latin America and the Caribbean

2min
page 251

South Asia

2min
page 260

Sub-Saharan Africa

4min
pages 264-265

Middle East and North Africa

2min
page 255

Europe and Central Asia

2min
page 246

East Asia and Pacific

2min
page 241

Informality in EMDEs

2min
page 237

References

24min
pages 222-234

4D.7 Regression: Changes in informality and poverty reduction

2min
page 208

competition

2min
page 206

4D.8 Regression: Changes in informality and improvement in income inequality

1min
page 209

4D.14 Regression: Developmental challenges and DGE-based output informality in EMDEs

5min
pages 216-218

Annex 4C Bayesian model averaging approach

4min
pages 200-201

4D.4 Regression: Labor productivity of formal and informal firms 4D.5 Regression: Labor productivity of formal firms facing informal

1min
page 205

Annex 4B Regression analysis

2min
page 199

Annex 4A Meta-regression analysis

2min
page 198

Informality and SDGs related to human development

2min
page 191

Informality and SDGs related to infrastructure

2min
page 193

4.3 Informality, poverty, and income inequality

5min
pages 180-182

Informality and institutions

2min
page 189

Finding the needle in the haystack: The most robust correlates

2min
page 195

Conclusion

1min
page 197

Informality and economic correlates

2min
page 179

4.2 Casting a shadow: Productivity in formal and informal firms

4min
pages 167-168

Links between informality and development challenges

2min
page 165

4.1 Informality and wage inequality

8min
pages 158-161

References

6min
pages 147-152

Conclusion

2min
page 136

Data and methodology

2min
page 129

Literature review: Linkages between formal and informal sectors

6min
pages 126-128

References

13min
pages 115-122

2B.9 World Values Survey

1min
page 114

2B.8 MIMIC model estimation results, 1993-2018

1min
page 113

Future research directions

2min
page 54

Database of informality measures

14min
pages 81-86

References

10min
pages 55-62

Key findings and policy messages

6min
pages 36-38

Definition of informality

4min
pages 79-80

Conclusion

2min
page 99

Annex 2A Estimation methodologies

9min
pages 100-103

16 Informality indicators and entrepreneurial conditions in Sub-Saharan

2min
page 35
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