In most developing nations, formal workers tend to be more experienced, more educated, and earn more than informal workers. These facts are often interpreted as evidence that low-skill workers face barriers to entry into the formal sector. Yet, there exists little direct evidence that such barriers are important. This paper describes a model where significant differences arise between formal and informal workers even though labor markets are perfectly competitive. In equilibrium, the informal sector emphasizes low-skill work because informal managers have access to less outside financing, and choose to substitute low-skill labor for physical capital.Labor market
We develop a search and matching model where matches (jobs) can be formal or informal. Workers choo...
This paper explores aspects of increased informalization in developing countries with the help of a ...
In developing countries, informal firms account for up to half of economic activity. They provide li...
The informal economy, which evades labor regulations, provides employment for much of the labor forc...
Competing conceptions of the large, unprotected,"informal"workforce in developing countries differ g...
We develop an equilibrium wage-posting model with heterogeneous firms that decide to locate in the f...
Abstract: Informality is widespread in most developing countries. In Latin America, 50 percent of sa...
The presence of informal sector is a pervasive and persistent feature of most developing countries o...
Labour markets of developing countries are typically characterised by low unemployment but high inf...
Empirical evidence suggests that the size of the informal sector in the developing countries has inc...
The recent growth experience in India highlights the role of skill-based service sector and producti...
The presence of informal sector is a pervasive and persistent feature of most developing countries o...
The ILO (2018) report shows that more than 61 per cent of the world's employed population work infor...
We develop a search and matching model where rms and workers produce output that depends both on mat...
The workhorse of urban labor theory in development economics is the formal/informal model of labor ...
We develop a search and matching model where matches (jobs) can be formal or informal. Workers choo...
This paper explores aspects of increased informalization in developing countries with the help of a ...
In developing countries, informal firms account for up to half of economic activity. They provide li...
The informal economy, which evades labor regulations, provides employment for much of the labor forc...
Competing conceptions of the large, unprotected,"informal"workforce in developing countries differ g...
We develop an equilibrium wage-posting model with heterogeneous firms that decide to locate in the f...
Abstract: Informality is widespread in most developing countries. In Latin America, 50 percent of sa...
The presence of informal sector is a pervasive and persistent feature of most developing countries o...
Labour markets of developing countries are typically characterised by low unemployment but high inf...
Empirical evidence suggests that the size of the informal sector in the developing countries has inc...
The recent growth experience in India highlights the role of skill-based service sector and producti...
The presence of informal sector is a pervasive and persistent feature of most developing countries o...
The ILO (2018) report shows that more than 61 per cent of the world's employed population work infor...
We develop a search and matching model where rms and workers produce output that depends both on mat...
The workhorse of urban labor theory in development economics is the formal/informal model of labor ...
We develop a search and matching model where matches (jobs) can be formal or informal. Workers choo...
This paper explores aspects of increased informalization in developing countries with the help of a ...
In developing countries, informal firms account for up to half of economic activity. They provide li...