nep-iue New Economics Papers
on Informal and Underground Economics
Issue of 2025–04–21
four papers chosen by
Catalina Granda Carvajal, Banco de la República


  1. The Agricultural Productivity Gap: Informality Matters By Rajveer Jat; Bharat Ramaswami
  2. Buffering Recessions : Labor Market Asymmetries and the Role of Self-Employment By Loungani, Prakash; Emiliano Evaristo Luttini; Hayley Marie Pallan
  3. Understanding Urban Informality in Iraq By Dalal Moosa; Joanna Abdel Ahad; Vanessa Moreira
  4. Tax morale, public goods, and politics: Experimental evidence from Mozambique By Wayne Aaron Sandholtz; Pedro C. Vicente

  1. By: Rajveer Jat (University of California, Riverside, USA); Bharat Ramaswami (Ashoka University)
    Abstract: The literature has debated whether the productivity gap between agriculture and non-agriculture reflects mobility barriers or selection. Non-agriculture is not a homogenous category. In developing countries, most of non-agricultural employment is informal. Could it be that the productivity gap is driven by formal sector firms that are numerically small but economically substantial? This paper compares the productivity of agriculture to the informal and formal non-farm sectors in India. The comparison controls for sectoral differences in hours worked, human capital and labor share of value added. The paper finds substantial productivity gaps with the formal sector but small and negligible gaps with the informal non-farm sector. Between 40-50% of non-farm workers are in sectors not more productive than agriculture. These findings suggest that the primary dualism in development is between the formal non-farm sector and the informal sector including agriculture.
    Date: 2024–10–25
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ash:wpaper:130
  2. By: Loungani, Prakash; Emiliano Evaristo Luttini; Hayley Marie Pallan
    Abstract: The employment structure in emerging markets and developing economies (EMDEs) differs markedly from that in advanced economies, which has implications for adjustment to cyclical conditions. This paper examines the cyclicality of employment in advanced economies and EMDEs. Although EMDEs exhibit a more violent GDP cycle than advanced economies, advanced economies present a steeper and more violent employment cycle. In the short term, an employment composition that is more biased toward self-employment, which is less cyclical, explains about 70 percent of these differences, while in the medium-term it accounts for about 40 percent. These characteristics explain why, during recessions, employment in advanced economies is more sensitive to economic fluctuations than in EMDEs.
    Date: 2025–03–24
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:11089
  3. By: Dalal Moosa; Joanna Abdel Ahad; Vanessa Moreira
    Keywords: Social Protections and Labor-Employment and Unemployment Social Protections and Labor-Work & Working Conditions Social Protections and Labor-Labor Law Social Protections and Labor-Social Protections & Assistance
    Date: 2023–07
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wbk:wboper:40069
  4. By: Wayne Aaron Sandholtz; Pedro C. Vicente
    Abstract: Tax revenue is vital for development, but governments must balance raising revenues with maintaining political support. Partnering with a city government in Mozambique, we experimentally vary the provision of information highlighting the role of municipal tax revenues in 1) local public good provision and 2) local political autonomy. We measure how this information affects property owners’ tax morale and political support for the government. Public goods information raises tax morale, especially in areas of low baseline public good provision, but has no effect on voting. The political message increases electoral support generally, but raises tax morale only among co-partisans. These results suggest that communication about the uses of public revenue offers a politically feasible way to increase tax morale.
    Keywords: Tax morale, Public goods, Information, Political economy, Experiments, Mozambique
    JEL: O12 H00 P00 C93
    Date: 2024
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:unl:unlfep:wp671

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