19 results on '"INFORMAL sector"'
Search Results
2. Actually Existing Neoliberalism and Enterprise Formation in the Informal Economy: Interrogating the Role of Mediating Social Enterprises in India and South Africa.
- Author
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Chopra, Vrinda
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SOCIAL enterprises , *INFORMAL sector , *SOCIAL entrepreneurship , *NEOLIBERALISM , *ECONOMIC geography , *MEDIATION - Abstract
Scholarship on social entrepreneurship primarily reduces social enterprises in the Global South to geographic variations of an idealized concept of combining commercial imperatives with social missions. In the article, I see social enterprise practice in economies of the Global South, namely India and South Africa, as channels to engage in the ongoing theorization of the field. The article draws on the frame of actually existing neoliberalism, moving beyond macroperspectives and policy imperatives on social entrepreneurship to show how neoliberal rationalities are mobilized and regulated by emancipatory rationalities and agendas. The empirical focus is on social enterprises mediating enterprise formation to address employment concerns in the informal, noncapital domains of India and South Africa. I draw on data from the ethnographic fieldwork on mediating social enterprises collected during my doctoral research. The lived realities of practice of the two intermediaries considered in the article, Dhwani in India and EntShare in South Africa, show mediating social enterprises in ongoing negotiations with capital and noncapital domains. Understanding the negotiations explains the convergences and divergences in how neoliberal economic rationalities align with progressive and emancipatory agendas and values across India and South Africa. In doing so, the article provides an opportunity to enrich conceptual registers of postcolonial economic geography by tracing and articulating mediation processes between neoliberal and nonneoliberal rationalities not solely from one site but across contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Informal Work and the Appropriation of Social Reproduction in Home-Based Work in India.
- Author
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Boeri, Natascia
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SOCIAL reproduction , *UNPAID labor , *LABOR supply , *HOUSEKEEPING , *INFORMAL sector , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
Home-based work is among the largest forms of employment in the informal economy in India and is overwhelmingly represented by women. Employing a social reproduction framework that reframes what is counted as labor, this article asks how women's unpaid work activities are appropriated as labor in subcontracted home-based work. Applying this analytical framework, it becomes clear that domestic work in the home, often completed by women, is needed and exploited in this production process as a result of gendered constructs of care. The contribution considers how unpaid work is directly appropriated by capital as surplus value. The context of informal work is key here because of the irregular and fragmented production process, the space where work occurs, and the use of unpaid family workers. The goal of this research is to offer empirical evidence that broadens analytical perspectives to account for the context of informality in the Global South. HIGHLIGHTS Subcontracted home-based work in India relies on a gendered, fragmented, and precarious labor force. Unpaid caregiving and household work directly contributes to profit-making. Western analytical concepts of the economy need to be reexamined in the context of the postcolonial informal economies. Research tools that measure economic participation need to capture how unpaid activities directly or indirectly contribute to economic processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Finance, Gender, and Entrepreneurship: India's Informal Sector Firms.
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Gang, Ira N., Raj Natarajan, Rajesh, and Sen, Kunal
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INFORMAL sector , *BUSINESSWOMEN , *PROPENSITY score matching , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP , *GENDER , *BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
How does informal economic activity respond to increased financial inclusion? Does it become more entrepreneurial? Does access to new financing options change the gender configuration of informal economic activity and, if so, in what ways and what directions? We take advantage of nationwide data collected in 2010/11 and 2015/16 by India's National Sample Survey Office on unorganized (informal) enterprises. This period was one of rapid expansion of banking availability aimed particularly at the unbanked, under-banked, and women. We find strong empirical evidence supporting the crucial role of financial access in promoting entrepreneurship among informal sector firms in India. Our results are robust to alternative specifications and alternative measures of financial constraints using an approach combining propensity score matching and difference-in-differences. However, we do not find conclusive evidence that increased financial inclusion leads to a higher likelihood of women becoming entrepreneurs than men in the informal sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Exploring the daily lives of women street vendors in India.
- Author
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McKay, Fiona H. and Osborne, Richard H.
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STREET vendors , *MOBILE food services , *EVERYDAY life , *INFORMAL sector , *LIVING conditions , *PERISHABLE foods - Abstract
Indian women enter the informal workforce for a range of reasons. Women food vendors tend to dominate low-income, low-skill activities, such as selling perishable food items. The aim of this study was to investigate the experiences of women food vendors in India. Twenty-four women were interviewed in 2015 and 2016 about financial matters, livelihoods, family, and housing, and the experience of vending. Findings indicate that women vendors are financially vulnerable, need greater access to education, better work and living conditions, and greater financial management options. Policies and programmes aimed at informal sector workers must recognise gender-specific vulnerabilities facing women vendors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Life, labour, and dreams: one woman's life in Old Delhi.
- Author
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Menon, Kalyani Devaki
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MUSLIM women , *LABOR , *INFORMAL sector - Abstract
The many Muslim women who make up India's burgeoning informal economy, challenge any attempt to reduce them to homemakers whose lives are delimited by culture and religion. An examination of their lives reveals the complex forces that shape their worlds, and illuminates how they variously negotiate landscapes of inequality in contemporary India. Here I focus on the biography of one Muslim widow to illustrate how she labours to live and dream in contemporary India as various social forces intersect to create precarity in her life. While neoliberal priorities and a shrinking social safety-net affect underprivileged women across religious lines, the intersection of gender, class, and religion in Hindu majoritarian India has made it even more challenging for low-income Muslim women like her to make ends meet. However, dominant forces are not totalising, and the biographical method reveals how one woman negotiates precarity, employing various skills as she adapts to changing conditions, juggling multiple jobs to meet expenses, and envisioning a better future. We see not just the deep inequalities that create precarity for some, but also how dreams can be a material force in the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Responding to the needs of beedi workers after the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Ali, Md Saddam and Kumar, Praveen
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SOCIAL support , *STRATEGIC planning , *CHARITY , *MANUFACTURING industries , *FOOD security , *BLUE collar workers , *MIGRANT labor , *FOOD supply , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *STAY-at-home orders , *TOBACCO products , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL case work - Abstract
As the nation-wide covid-19 lockdown was implemented, a large number of workers who were engaged in beedi work (tobacco manufacturing industry) lost their daily wage work. These people had migrated to metro cities almost ten years ago for their livelihood, working in this perilous industry. Soon thereafter, though, they felt that they had no choice but return to the hazardous beedi work. This narrative tells the story of the formation and development of a small group that aimed to provide relief for the beedi laborers and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Informal learning and skill formation within the Indian informal tailoring sector.
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Regel, Imke Julia and Pilz, Matthias
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INFORMAL sector , *NONFORMAL education , *ABILITY , *OVERWEIGHT persons - Abstract
The informal economy in India provides more than 90 per cent of the labour force. This leads to the largest number of people in informal settings being trained informally and their skills are considered to be low. Previous research findings, however, have not supported this general assumption about low skill levels. The current study is concerned with the sub-sector of urban tailoring that has not yet been the focus of much research. The main questions of interest are: What kinds of skills do Indian tailors have and where and in what ways are these skills acquired? Twelve interviews with tailors were conducted in Delhi and ten in or near Vellore, Tamil Nadu. The results show clearly that tailors in the informal sector in India not only have a wide range of skills in tailoring, but also in organizing and running their business in economic terms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Comparative capitalism and emerging economies: formal-informal economy interlockages and implications for institutional analysis.
- Author
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Hammer, Anita
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CAPITALISM , *INFORMAL sector , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC impact , *EMERGING markets - Abstract
Research in comparative capitalism has seen an increasing interest in emerging economies and has made attempts at integrating the informal economy as a distinct and significant feature of the institutional configuration and reproduction of contemporary capitalisms. The way this has been achieved, however, is problematic as it has mainly worked with a dualist notion of the formal and informal economies, thereby making it difficult to conceptualise any interlinkages. This article argues that the relation between the formal and informal economies needs to be conceptualised as an interlocking one in order to analyse the constitutive place the informal economy has in the dynamics of formal institutions as well as the overall institutional configuration of emerging capitalisms. A focus on interlockages helps in conceptualising diversity, by bringing the heterogeneity of social relations within the formal and informal economies to the fore. This focus also allows for a more nuanced understanding of the distribution of resources across institutions and actors, and how change is shaped by struggles within specific interlocking configurations. India serves as a useful example in this respect insofar as the centrality of the informal economy to Indian capitalism can be shown to be due to the specific interlockages as opposed to the, probably more eye catching, size of its informal economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Informality as Fix.
- Author
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Badami, Nandita
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WASTE recycling , *INFORMAL sector , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 , *INDUSTRIAL management , *OPPOSITIONAL culture ,INDIAN economy, 1991- - Abstract
Street cultures of make-do and reuse in contemporary India, colloquially known as jugaad, is a set of material practices that have had a long and established history in the country. This article juxtaposes such practices with ‘repair’ in order to consider the politics of jugaad as it played out in the years following the financial crisis of 2008. As growth rates suffered massive contractions and workers were laid off in large numbers, jugaad came to take on cultural valences in unexpected contexts, especially within business management literature, where it signalled the vibrancy of the ‘informal’ economy. Following the migration of the term into widespread English usage, alongside the parallel, growing demand for the ‘right to repair’ in the United States and Europe, this article traces how an undisciplined, subaltern practice of repurposing came to be repurposed, in turn, in the service of the failing ‘formal’ economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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11. Informal sector entrepreneurship for women in China and India: building networks, gaining recognition, and obtaining support.
- Author
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Warnecke, Tonia
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ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,INFORMAL sector ,BUSINESS planning ,BUSINESSPEOPLE - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Small Business & Entrepreneurship is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2016
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12. Diverse trajectories of industrial restructuring and labour organising in India.
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Miyamura, Satoshi
- Subjects
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LABOR unions , *ECONOMIC change , *LABOR organizing , *LABOR movement , *INFORMAL sector - Abstract
It is often claimed that industrial restructuring leads to diminished roles for trade unionism and other forms of labour organisations by informalising employment and relocating production. Drawing on selected case studies from long-term fieldwork in regions of India, this article shows that trajectories of industrial restructuring and the responses by organised labour over the past two decades have been diverse. It is argued that the diverse response not only reflects structural opportunities and constraints for labour to be organised in particular ways, but also different histories and experiences of labour association. Contrary to the presumption about the general demise of trade unionism and the apparent unattainability of class solidarity in contemporary globalised capitalism, it is observed that India’s labour movement is experiencing a degree of resurgence, and new forms of labour organisations and activism are emerging, especially involving informal workers in the formal sector. That these innovative forms of mobilisation are shaped by experiences and aspirations that do not conform to the established institutionalised frameworks for dispute resolution has important policy and political implications. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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13. Do Informal Sector Wages Explain Rural Poverty? Evidence from India.
- Author
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Kathuria, Vinish and Raj S.N., Rajesh
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INFORMAL sector , *RURAL poor , *MINIMUM wage , *POVERTY reduction ,URBANIZATION & society - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between incidence of poverty and reliance on informal sector by workers in rural areas. The authors find that higher incidence poverty in rural areas can be explained to a certain extent by low wages in the sector, once we control for urbanization and other factors. Given the small size of formal sector and its substantially lower employment elasticity, the scope for expansion of employment in this sector is limited. The article concludes that elimination of rural poverty demands improving the condition of workers in the informal sector, which rests on paying minimum wages besides imparting skills. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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14. Prevalence of low back pain among handloom weavers in West Bengal, India.
- Author
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Durlov, Santu, Chakrabarty, Sabarni, Chatterjee, Arijit, Das, Tamal, Dev, Samrat, Gangopadhyay, Somnath, Haldar, Prasun, Maity, Santi Gopal, Sarkar, Krishnendu, and Sahu, Subhashis
- Subjects
DISEASE prevalence ,BACKACHE ,WEAVERS ,HANDLOOM industry ,DISEASES - Abstract
Background: Handloom is one of the oldest industries in India, particularly in West Bengal, where a considerable number of rural people are engaged in weaving. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of low back pain among the handloom weavers in India. Methods: A modified Nordic Musculoskeletal Disorder Questionnaire and Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire along with a body part discomfort scale were administered to handloom weavers (n=175). Working posture of the participants was assessed using the Ovako Working Posture Analysis System (OWAS). Results: Sixty eight per cent of the participants reported suffering from low back pain, making it the most prevalent disorder in our sample. Analysis of the Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire data revealed that among those with low back pain (n=119), 2% had severe disabilities, 46% had moderate disabilities, and 52% had minimal disabilities. Statistical analyses revealed a positive significant association between the intensity of pain in the lower back and an increased number of years of work experience (P<0.05). Conclusions: The study underlines the need for further research regarding the postural strain of weavers and also suggests the implementation of ergonomic design into weaver workstations to minimize the adverse effect of their current working postures. Improving upon the weaver's work-posture could improve their quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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15. Women as marginal workers in informal mining and quarrying, India: a preliminary analysis.
- Author
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Mukhopadhaya, Pundarik and Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala
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WOMEN'S employment , *WOMEN employees , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of 2001 Indian Census data at the state level on women workers in the mining and quarrying (M&Q) sector. In the absence of official data on informal M&Q, the paper uses the census category of ‘marginal workers’ as a rough indicator of informal employment within this industrial category. The paper has two stages of analysis: first, it presents a state-by-state description of employment of women as main and marginal workers in key minerals; it then correlates income and other social indicators to the proportion of women marginal workers in different mineral categories in order to explore the connections between income, poverty/economic ill-being, caste and other social factors and informal M&Q. It concludes that at the state level, correlations are difficult to draw, and that there is need for further elaborate data for analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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16. Explaining the ‘jobless’ growth in Indian manufacturing.
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Thomas, JayanJose
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MANUFACTURING industries , *INFORMAL sector , *CONTRACT employment , *FOREIGN exchange rates , *LABOR market ,RAW material sales & prices - Abstract
In Indian manufacturing, which accounts for only 12.2% of the country's workforce, a few technologically advanced sectors coexist with a vast informal sector. The growth of Indian manufacturing is characterized by ‘joblessness’, and during the post-1991 years, by large yearly and industry-wise variations. While a few capital- and skill-intensive industries recorded fast rates of growth of value added, employment generation occurred largely in the unorganized sector, mainly in export-oriented industries such as garments and textiles. The frequently cited argument that the major barrier to manufacturing-employment growth in India is the ‘rigidity’ in the country's labour regulations rests on very thin empirical evidence. With the rising share of contract workers even within the organized segments of manufacturing since the 1990s, the very argument that India's labour market is rigid is questionable. Power shortages, insufficient availability of credit and the volatility in exchange rates and raw material prices are some of the important factors that constrained the growth of Indian manufacturing, especially the small-scale sector. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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17. Institutional change from within the informal sector in Indian rural labour relations.
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Olsen, Wendy and Morgan, Jamie
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INFORMAL sector , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *CASUAL labor , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *WOMEN employees - Abstract
The paper applies a theory of institutional change enriched with mezzorules, fluidity and agency to India's informal sector institutional evolution using two illustrative examples. The concrete examples are rooted in unfree labour and rural casual labouring in India, a country which has a high degree of informality. Section 1 introduces some concepts, and section 2 examines processes of institutional change in the informal sector. In section 3, two illustrations are explored: (1) the norms for girl child bonded labour; (2) the individualisation of women labourers. Section 4 concludes. The fluidity of institutional rules demands a recognition of the supra-economic nature of the context within which economic-institutional change occurs. We propose the analysis of mezzorules in a dialogic research context, i.e. interactions among workers and collective agents - as a helpful and transformative approach for sociologists specialising in the informal economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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18. Globalisation, informalisation and the state in the Indian garment industry.
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Mezzadri, Alessandra
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CLOTHING industry , *GLOBALIZATION , *INFORMAL sector , *CAPITAL , *ECONOMICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Globalisation has affected the industrial trajectories of developing countries, producing an increasing disarticulation between the management of production and regimes of labour control. While production regimes have been projected into the global arena, labour regimes have remained apparently anchored to regulatory mechanisms provided by local social structures, and gone through increasing processes of informalisation. Examining the case of the Indian garment sector, this paper argues that the informalisation of labour should not be conceived as necessarily taking place 'in the shadow of the state'. In fact, in the case presented here, the state was a strong active agency behind the process of informalisation, which it supported through formal policies and through its progressive alignment with the interests of capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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19. FORMAL AND INFORMAL SECTORS IN CHINA AND INDIA.
- Author
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Rada, Codrina
- Subjects
GRAY market ,BLACK market ,ECONOMIC structure - Abstract
This paper discusses the estimation of a social accounting matrix that distinguishes between formal and informal activities for China and India for 2000 and 1998-99 respectively. Wage shares for formal/informal employment in China and net domestic product shares for organized/unorganized sectors in India are used as weights to calculate the size of the two sectors. The proposed methodology is a first step towards an integrated approach to account for the dualism of many economies in the developing world. The results can serve as data input for any policy-driven CGE model for developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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