The aim of this article is to evaluate the competing theories that variously explain the greater prevalence of undeclared employment in some countries either as: a legacy of under-development; a result of the voluntary exit from declared employment due to the high taxes, state corruption and burdensome regulations and controls, or a product of a lack of state intervention in work and welfare which leads to the exclusion of workers from the declared economy and state welfare provision. Analyzing the cross-national variations in the prevalence of, and reasons for, undeclared employment across the European Union using evidence from a 2007 Eurobarometer survey, the finding is that undeclared employment is less prevalent and more of the voluntar...
Th e aim of this paper is to evaluate critically the extent to which the conventional eradication a...
The dominant depiction of undeclared work as exploitative low-paid employment has been contested by ...
Representations of who participates in undeclared work have adopted either a marginalization thesis ...
This paper evaluates the competing theories that seek to explain the greater magnitude of undeclared...
Purpose Until now, most scholars have used one of four competing theories to explain undeclared wor...
AbstractIn the context of European economic recovery, undeclared work has become a true challenge fo...
This article evaluates critically the contrasting explanations for the cross-national variations in ...
The aim of this paper is to better understand cross-national variations in the informalisation of em...
The so called ‘shadow economy’ refers to work and financial transactions that take place outside of ...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the individual-and country-level variations in unregistered emp...
The so called ‘shadow economy’ refers to work and financial transactions that take place outside of ...
In social life, undeclared work has acquired economic and legal connotations that are more and more ...
In recent years, the view that the undeclared economy is separate from the declared economy has been...
Abstract: In recent years, there has been a growing recognition that some employers illegitimately u...
Three competing theories have been used to explain participation in the undeclared economy. A struct...
Th e aim of this paper is to evaluate critically the extent to which the conventional eradication a...
The dominant depiction of undeclared work as exploitative low-paid employment has been contested by ...
Representations of who participates in undeclared work have adopted either a marginalization thesis ...
This paper evaluates the competing theories that seek to explain the greater magnitude of undeclared...
Purpose Until now, most scholars have used one of four competing theories to explain undeclared wor...
AbstractIn the context of European economic recovery, undeclared work has become a true challenge fo...
This article evaluates critically the contrasting explanations for the cross-national variations in ...
The aim of this paper is to better understand cross-national variations in the informalisation of em...
The so called ‘shadow economy’ refers to work and financial transactions that take place outside of ...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the individual-and country-level variations in unregistered emp...
The so called ‘shadow economy’ refers to work and financial transactions that take place outside of ...
In social life, undeclared work has acquired economic and legal connotations that are more and more ...
In recent years, the view that the undeclared economy is separate from the declared economy has been...
Abstract: In recent years, there has been a growing recognition that some employers illegitimately u...
Three competing theories have been used to explain participation in the undeclared economy. A struct...
Th e aim of this paper is to evaluate critically the extent to which the conventional eradication a...
The dominant depiction of undeclared work as exploitative low-paid employment has been contested by ...
Representations of who participates in undeclared work have adopted either a marginalization thesis ...