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Identifiers
The Determinants of Informality in Mexico's States
Sean Dougherty and Octavio Escobar
Informality has important implications for productivity, economic growth, and the inequality of income. In recent years, the extent of informal employment has increased in many of Mexico's states, though highly heterogeneously. The substantial differences across states in terms of informal employment can be helpful in explaining differences in economic growth outcomes. This paper studies the determinants of informal employment using states' diverging outcomes to identify causal factors, taking into account potential endogeneity. The results suggest that multiple factors explain differences in informal employment across states, including per capita income, the quality of labour skills, differences in the prevalence of microenterprises, the cost to start a business, restrictions on foreign investment, the rule of law and incidence of corruption.
Topics in this document
Informal economy
Employment
Autocorrelation
Heteroscedasticity
Generalized method of moments
Endogeneity (econometrics)
Economic growth
Tax
Productivity
Labour economics
Coefficient of determination
Economy
Ordinary least squares
Fixed effects model
Regression analysis
Economics
Correlation
P-value
Output (economics)
Estimator
Economic inequality
Related SDGs
SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth ...
SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth
Target 8.3
Promote development-oriented policies that support productive activities, decent job creation, entrepreneurship, creativity and innovation, and encourage the formalization and growth of micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises, including through access to financial services
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Citations
Cited by 40
other policy documents
(13 of them are from other policy sources)