The Economics of Informality Conference 2018
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The conference will be the first organized by the “Network on Informality Studies” at Universidad del Rosario.
The school of Economics at Universidad del Rosario (Bogota, Colombia) is pleased to invite you to The Economics of Informality Conference 2018. This Conference aims to bring together scholars, experts, young researchers, practitioners and policy makers to present their work and exchange knowledge and debate the issues about informal economy.
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- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoA Bonanza for Bad Politicians: Informal Gold Mining and Criminal Candidates in Peru(2018-05-29) Bandiera, Antonella; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018How do natural resource windfalls affect the quality of politicalcandidates? Existing scholarship argues that non-tax public revenuehas a negative effect on the characteristics of candidates because itimpairs the capacity of voters to hold leaders accountable. This liter-ature, however, has not considered other non-tax sources of revenue,namely, the rents derived from the informal and illegal exploitation ofnatural resources. In this paper, I analyze the effects of an increaseof informal gold production in Peru. I find that in districts that havehigher levels of informal gold mining, increases in prices worsens thequality of politicians. In particular, I use novel data on the crimi-nal records of candidates to show that a spike in the price of goldattracts more criminal candidates to politics and leads elected politi-cians to be accused of committing a crime more often. Interestingly,I also find that candidates who have a criminal record are less likelyto be elected. These results suggest that information on the trajec-tories of politicians is key to improve the quality of candidates that will be elected, and that the enforcement of natural resource regula-tion is crucial to eliminate the influence of rents on the behavior ofpoliticians.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoBank Account Ownership by Micro-entrepreneurs in Mexico(2018-05-28) Rodríguez Zamora, Carolina; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018This paper evaluates the impact of a VAT rate increase on bank account ownershipby Mexican micro-entrepreneurs considering informality as the main channel of this effect. Using two rounds of a cross-section survey aimed at understanding financial inclusion in Mexicoand a difference-in-difference strategy, results indicate that an increase in the VAT rate negatively affects the probability of having a bank account by micro-entrepreneurs in northern municipalities where the tax rate increased from 11 to 16 percent. In particular, financial inclusion of micro-entrepreneurs in the northern border decreased and the effect is statistically significant,whereas financial inclusion of formal and informal salaried workersin the northern borderdid not change as their fiscal obligations remained the same with the VAT amendment.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoConstrained occupational choice(2018-05-29) Margolis, David; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018This paper uses a reduced-form implementation of a structural model of constrained oc-cupational choice to explain the probability that an individual receives a wage offer, animportant determinant of whether self-employment is by choice or necessity. Using datafrom Sierra Leone in 2016, the paper estimates the model and finds that the unconditionaldistribution of offer probabilities has a large spike at a very low value (0.013), but that cer-tain characteristics, such as education, being male and residence in the capital city increasethe likelihood of being able to choose not be self-employed.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoDifferences in efficiency between formal and informal micro-firms in Mexico(2018-05-28) Báez-Morales, Antonio; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018Micro firmscan be seen as potential growth drivers, as they are usually related to entrepreneurship, a relatively high share of micro firms can also be a sign of an underdeveloped productive system.Unlike other studies, this researchseparates formal and informal micro firms in order to test whether there are efficiency differences between them, and to explain these differences. One of the novelties of the study is the use of the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition method. The empirical evidence suggests that output and efficiency differences are not only explained by endowment characteristics but also by endowment returns
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoEffects of pension benefits on pre-retirement labor supply: Evidence from Chile(2018-05-29) Becerra, Oscar; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018This paper describes the effects of pension benefits on pre-retirement labor supplyfor a representative sample of Chilean workers. Using non-linearities in benefits and areform that changed non-contributory pensions, I estimate the effect of pension wealthand pension accrual rate on labor force and contributory-sector participation, earnings,and hours worked. I find that the response of labor supply to future pension benefitsis mostly through the effect of the pension accrual on the probability to contributeto the pension system. My results suggest that pension benefits affect labor supplyallocation, an effect that should be considered in the design of pension reforms.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoExploring the role of health in Early Retirement by occupational status: looking for the causes of the greying of the self-employed sector(2018-05-28) Arévalo, Paola P.; Concepción, Román; Congregado, Emilio; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018This paper investigates the relationship between early retirement and health by using a discrete duration model in order to check if some differences across employment status emerge. Using the European Community Household Panel (henceforth ECHP) covering the period 1994-2001, this work produces new empirical resultson the effect of the self-perceived health state to the decision to early retirement. The main hypothesis was to find differences between paid-employees and self-employees, however our results point to how the potential effects of health on the early retirement decision could be circumvented in paid-work thanks to employment protection legislation (for paid-employees) whereas in self-employment the real health status is a key determinantonthis decision.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoFinancial disincentives for formal work in Ecuador and Colombia(2018-03-28) Rodríguez, David; Jara, Xavier; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018High and persistent labour informality has been a major problem for Latin American economies where most workers are excluded from social protectionandhave low and variable incomes.In the case of Ecuador and Colombia, despite recent formalisationpolicies, there is still a long way aheadto reduce informality which affects near half of the workforce.This paper seeks to quantifythe role of tax and benefit systems on financial incentives to enter formal work.In order to do so, weassess the formalisationcosts for Ecuadorian and Colombian informal workers using multi-country tax-benefit microsimulation techniques. In particular, we make use of representative microdata and simulate transitions from the informal into the formal sector to calculate the proportion of earnings that will be taxed away in the form of increased taxes andsocial insurance contributionsor reduced cash transfers, when a worker enters formality. We test the sensitivity of our results to different assumptions about the wage level individualswouldface when entering the formal sectorwith several imputation strategies.Our findingsshow that financial costs of formalisation are almost equaltopossible labour income gainsafter a transition to the formal sector. In other words, despite counterfactual formal income is in most of the cases higher than in the informal sector,the design of the tax system, and particularly, of social insurance contributions, erase mostpotential monetary gains of such a transition. This is espe-ciallytrue for self-employment workers.Furthermore, assuming workers self-select into the sector offering a comparative advantage we find even higher formalisations costs.Lastly, taking into account compliance with minimum wage legislation labour income gainsare muchhigher than using only counterfactual estimates, however,formalisation costs do not decrease substantially.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoFormal Employment is a Consequence of Skill Diversity in Cities(2018-05-28) Chaparro, Juan Camilo; O'Clery, Neave; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018Why do cities with larger populations in developing countries create relatively more formal employment? We build a model where skill diversity increases with working age population size, and urban agglomeration economies result from complementarities at the firm level between workers with diverse skills. Inactive, unemployed,or self-employed (informal) workers are gradually absorbed by firms as new sectors appear via an evolutionary process ofskill recombination by firms.The model makes four predictions: (1) faster firm entry in less complex sectors, (2) higher wages in more complex sectors, (3) relatively more formal employment in larger cities, and (4) faster formal employment growth in cities that have more of the skills needed in more complex sectors. Since skills are not observable, sector complexity is computed from sector diversity and ubiquity, and skill availability from inter-industry labor transitions. We find strong empirical support for all of the predictions when tested with social security data for Colombia for the period 2008-2015.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoHeterogenous e ects of informality: An application to labor regulation policy in Russia(2018-05-28) Otero, Andrea; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018The paper estimates the heterogeneous returns of informality in Russia. The em-pirical strategy uses a Marginal Treatment Effect model (MTE). The data comes fromthe Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey (RLMS) and a combination of regionaldata for the period 2009-2016. I also constructed a measure of enforcement of laborregulation at the regional level that allows me to identify the parameters of the MTEmodel. I find that formal workers have, on average, 20% higher wage rates than in-formal workers. Additionally, the MTE has a negative slope, which reflects the factthat individuals with a higher propensity score of being formal are those who are morelikely to work formally -they have the largest positive gains of this type of jobs on theirearnings. My estimates also show that those individuals with a very low propensityof working formally can be negatively affected by having these types of jobs. Thesefindings suggest that the decision of working formally versus informally responds toa comparative advantage story and not segmentation of the labor market/ability hy-pothesis.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoHow vulnerable are the self-employed? Evidence from Uganda(2018-05-28) Lakemann, Tabea; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018Due to small firm sizes and inter-linkages between household and business finances, small-scale entrepreneurs in developing countries are inherently vulnerable to temporary and per-manent income shortfalls, and hence household poverty. While the ILO generally defines self-employment without employees as vulnerable employment, little empirical research has beendone on the extent to which the self-employed are indeed vulnerable. This paper makes twomain contributions: first, it operationalises the concept of vulnerability in the context of self-employment in developing countries by defining vulnerability as the risk of having businessincome below a living wage threshold. Secondly, it investigates the extent and correlates ofvulnerability. Using a balanced entrepreneur panel dataset from Kampala, Uganda, it is shownthat the self-employed are heterogeneous with respect to vulnerability and observed earnings:while close to 70% of the sample are vulnerable and mostly earn incomes below the threshold,about 30% are non-vulnerable and mostly earn incomes above the living wage. Vulnerable en-trepreneurs are shown to be significantly different from non-vulnerable entrepreneurs in severaldimensions, including those that do not directly predict income.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoIlluminating the shadows in U.S. States(2018-05-29) Dincer, Oguzhan (Oz); Adhikari, Bibek; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018What forces the businesses to hidein the shadows? There are two competing theories trying to explainthis behavior, one identifying high tax burdenand the other corruptionas the main force.As Friedman et al. (2000) and Dreher et al. (2008) argue, according to the first theory, businesses are simply not willing to pay high taxes and keep all of their profits to themselves. According to the second theory, they are actually willing to pay taxes, but not willing to pay bribes.In this study, we investigate the relationship between corruption and the size of the shadow economy in U.S. states using a new and novel Shadow Economy Index (SEI) which is developed based on satellite data on night lights.We find that there is a complementary relationship between corruption and the size of the shadow economy across U.S. states supporting the results of Johnson et al. (1998) and Friedman et al. (2000) which use cross country data.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoInformal sector employment and poverty in South Africa(2018-05-29) Cichello, Paul; Rogan, Michael; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018We examine the role that informal sector employment plays in poverty reduction using data from the National Income Dynamics Study (NIDS). Using a Shapley decomposition approach, wefind that government transfers and formal sector jobs are the dominant drivers of aggregate poverty reduction. Informal sector jobs currently play a limited role in poverty reduction at the national level. This is primarily driven by the fact that there are relatively few informal sector jobs compared to formal sector jobs. On a per-job basis, the poverty reduction associated with formal sector jobs and informal sector jobs is quite similar. The poverty reduction associated with one informal sector job is generally between 50 to 100 per cent of the poverty reduction associated with one formal sector job (depending on the poverty measure, poverty line and year chosen). Therefore, from a poverty reduction standpoint, policy makers are encouraged to view job gains and losses in the informal sector approximately on par with gains and losses of formal sector jobs.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoInformal taxation in Sierra Leone : Magnitudes, perceptions and implications(2018-05-28) Van den Boogaard, Vanessa; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018In low-income countries, citizens often pay ‘taxes’ that differ substantially from what is required by statute. These non-statutory taxes are central to financing both local public goods and maintaining informal governance institutions. This study captures the incidence of informal taxation and taxpayer perspectives onthese payments. It is based on a taxpayer survey, in-depth interviews with government and chiefdom officials, and focus group discussions with community stakeholders across three districts of Sierra Leone. We find, first, that informal taxes are a prevalent reality within areas of weak formal statehoodin Sierra Leone, with households paying an equal number of informal and formal taxes. Second, we find positive taxpayer perceptions of the fairness of informal taxes relative to formal taxes, despite informal taxes beingregressive in theirdistribution. We explain this by the fact that taxpayers are more likely to trust the actor levying these payments, and are more likely to believe that they will be used to deliver benefits to the community.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoInformality and segmentation : evidence from a self-selection model with entry barriers to formal employment in Peru(2018-05-28) Alvarado Enciso, Alfredo M.; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018The academic debate about informality has discussed whether this implies a segmented labor market, a competitive one or a mixed of both. Recent research has employed various empirical models in order to validate those hypothesis.However, it has not been possible to correct several deficiencies such as the use of earning equation, exogenous specification of labor segments and endogeneity by self selection. The present paper correct this constrains by using a self selectionmodel with entry barriers to formalemployment. It is concluded that there is indeed a multi-segmented labor market and that about a third of informal workers are involuntary
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoLabor flows in Venezuela 1997-2013(2018-05-28) Fernández Bujanda, León; Montilla, Mayra; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018This paper measures worker gross flows and instantaneous transition probabilities in Venezuela from 1998 to 2013. We assemble a panel dataset, which is the source of our flow calculations. We contribute to the literature by separating flows from the formal sector employment and from the informal sector employment, which has a significant share of the working` population in Venezuela, to analyze flows between four labor market states. We decompose the contribution of each flow into the cyclical variation of the unemployment rate, the employment-to-population ratio, and the informality rate. This paper finds that change in unemployment is associated mainly with the flow from employment to unemployment. Moreover, the informal sector workers do contribute to fluctuations in the unemployment rate in a larger proportion than the formal sector workers.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoLabor Market Search, Informality, and On-The-Job Human Capital Accumulation(2018-05-28) Bobba, Matteo; Flabbi, Luca; Levy, Santiago; Tejada, Mauricio; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018We develop a search and matching model where firms and workers produce outputthat depends both on match-specific productivity and on worker-specific human capi-tal. The human capital is accumulated while working but depreciates while searchingfor a job. Firms optimally post the formality status wages are determined by bar-gaining. The equilibrium is characterized by an endogenous steady state distributionof human capital and by an endogenous formality rate. We estimate the model onlabor market data from Mexico. We find that human capital accumulation on-the-jobis responsible for about one third of the overall value of production. We also find thathuman capital upgrading is slower while working informally than formally. This mag-nifies the negative impact on productivity of the labor market institutions that giveraise to informality.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoMinimum Wage, Informality and Economic Development(2018-05-28) Kim, Jin Ho; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018n this paper we study the impact of minimum wage increase on the employmentstatus. Toward that goal, we rst empirically show that informal sector economy shows hetero-geneity though, on average, its characteristics support dual perspective (La Porta and Shleifer2008, 2014), and that formal sector economy shows monopsonistic competition over laborers. Theinformation on the features of informal and formal sector economy, provides a theoretical supportfor the empirical nding: minimum wage hike (i) increase formal sector employment, (ii) increasethe average productivity of the employer by forcing out small rms with less productivity out ofbusiness, and (iii) increase in intensive form of informality. Building on the empirical ndings,we extend Burdett-Mortensen equilibrium wage-posting model with heterogeneity in individualability. The central feature of the model is to allow heterogeneous aspect of informality by indi-vidual ability and also incorporate extensive and intensive margins of informality that previousresearch developed (Ulyssea (2017)). By putting together these dierent aspect of informality andthe presence of monopsonistic behavior of formal sector economy, we oer theoretical mechanismthat oers an insight on individuals' response on minimum wage hike. The central feature of themodel is the presence of spillover eects of minimum wage on both higher and lower earning ranksdue to monopsonistic competition among rms for workers and also due to incomplete compliance.Overall our theoretical model suggests that increase in minimum wage, in the long-run, leads to thechange of characteristics of informal sector economic activity, from external informality to informalinformality, and average ability of remaining self-employed decreases and average productivity ofentrepreneurs increase.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoNAIRU and Informality in the Mexican Labor Market(2018-05-28) Alcaraz, Carlo; Aguilar, Ana María; Carlo Alcaraz, Claudia Ramírez; Rodríguez-Pérez, Cid; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018The Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU) is an essential indicator for the reading of the economic cycle. However, estimation of this rateis complexsince it is not directly observable. Insome emerging economies, such as Mexico, the presence of a sizeable number of informal workers imposes an additional challenge when estimating and interpreting the NAIRU. The informal sector has the wage flexibility needed to incorporate the majority of the individuals that cannot find a job in the formal labor market. As a result, the unemployment rate in Mexicois low since it only includes frictional employment and a fraction of the cyclical unemployment. To address this issue, in this paper we propose a new measure of NAIRU that includes informality in the labor market as an indicator of labor underutilization. Weestimate the NAIRU over time using both the traditional unemployment rate (NAIRU-trad) and the rate that takes into account both unemployment and informal labor(NAIRU-inf). We find that both measures of NAIRU and their corresponding labor market slack follow a similar pattern overtime. The slack in the labor market estimated with the indicator that includes informality (slack-inf) could be a valuable alternative variable to the traditional measure of slack (slack-trad) given the presence of a significantinformal sector in Mexico. We conclude that this new indicator of slack could become a useful tool for monetary policy in countries with a sizeable informal sector and a relatively low unemployment level.
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoOptimal Monetary policy with Informality: A Benchmark Framework(2018-05-28) Gómez, Mónica A.; Hairault, Jean-Olivier; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018Our paper aims at unveiling how much the monetary policy shall deviate from the zero-inflation allocation in an economy with a large informal sector. A first insight is thatinformality amplifies cost-push shocks on inflation. The gap between the natural rateand the first best allocation varies due to both fluctuations in tax distortion and sectoralmisallocation. In both channels, the size of informality is key for the magnitude of thecost-push shock, and with it the cost of business cycles. It happens that the higher thelevel of informality, the larger the business cycle costs are. A second insight is relatedto how the monetary policy should optimally spread these costs in terms of inflationand output gap volatility, and how it depends on the informality size. It is shown thatthe aggregate sacrifice ratio (in terms of a weighted average of the sectoral output gaps)increases with the size of the informal sector. This leads to recommend less inflationstability in an economy with a large informal sector. The last insight is that monetarypolicy should not target one particular sector as there is a sectoral integration condition.Only considerations related to informational issues could lead to recommend to favor theformal output gap in the monetary rule
- ÍtemAcceso AbiertoOptimal Redistribution with a Shadow Economy(2018-05-28) Doligalski, Pawel; Rojas, Luis E.; The Economics of Informality Conference 2018We extend the theory of the optimal redistributive taxation to economies with an informal labor market. The optimal tax formula contains two new terms capturing reported income responses of informal workers on an intensive and an extensive margin. Both terms decrease the optimal tax rates. We quantitatively show that this reduction can be substantial, exceeding 30 percentage points, and we document a large welfare gain of up to 6.4% of consumption from following our tax formula rather than the standard formula. We also provide a novel decomposition of the welfare impact of the shadow economy into labor eficiency and redistribution components. In the quantitative model estimated with Colombian data the shadow economy benefi ts efficiency at the expense of redistribution. As a result, conditional on the optimal tax policy, the presence of the informal sector does not substantially affect social welfare unless social preferences for redistribution are strong.