The Long Shadow of Informality

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C H A P T ER 1

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

reforms accompanied by business development and training programs, public awareness campaigns, and stronger enforcement. Fourth, financial development has been associated with declining informality (box 6.1). It reduces the average costs of access to external financing and incentivizes firms to invest in higher-productivity projects and to join the formal sector. Over the past three decades, increased access to financial services and increased credit availability have been followed by declining informality. Fifth, a comprehensive policy package tailored to country circumstances offers the greatest chance of success in reducing informality. A combination of measures to strengthen economic development, boost productivity in both formal and informal sectors, streamline regulations, and ensure effective enforcement can address multiple sources of informality. The relative priorities will depend on the country-specific features of informality.

Future research directions The study suggests several avenues for future research. Concepts and measurement. Despite the richness of the informality database detailed in chapter 2, the limitations and weaknesses of existing measures remain. Future research could improve the quality of these measures and explore new approaches to better capture the extent of informality in EMDEs. Chapter 2 distills the main features of informal-economy business cycles but does not look into the factors and policies that could trigger cyclical turning points. Further analysis in this direction would be valuable. Cyclical behavior of the informal economy. Chapter 3 focuses on how informal output and employment behave over the business cycle and points to several promising areas for future research. First, the cyclical behavior of other features of the informal economy could be examined. For example, if greater flexibility of wages or hours worked is indeed what makes informal employment acyclical despite procyclical informal output, informal wages or hours should be particularly procyclical, and evidence of this would be useful. Second, the channels through which formal-economy business cycles affect the informal economy could be further explored and quantified. This includes the degree of interconnectedness between formal and informal firms. Third, the impact of the pandemic on the informal sector and the effectiveness of policy responses should be studied further. Consequences of informality for development. Chapter 4 establishes the link between informality and a range of symptoms of underdevelopment. However, it does not demonstrate a causal linkage between informality and various development outcomes. Future research could aim to uncover, for at least some of these correlates, the degree to which informality causes underdevelopment. Second, because of data limitations, some variables, such as access to paved roads and bank account ownership, that are relevant to informality are not included in the empirical analysis. Future studies can improve upon


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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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