Back to Search
Start Over
Informality and the labor market effects of financial crises
- Source :
- World Development. 119:1-22
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2019.
-
Abstract
- We provide evidence, based on a large sample of countries, on the effects of financial crises on key labor market indicators, including official and unofficial employment, unemployment and the participation rate. Crises are followed by a drop in the official market participation rate and by an increase in informal employment. These responses are strongly persistent. Empirical results are then interpreted with a DSGE model which accounts for informality and for financial and labor market frictions. In this framework the informal sector acts as a buffer which absorbs workers in bad times and vice versa. Our simulations suggest the informal sector also is a crisis amplifier for the official economy. For a given financial shock, the ensuing contraction in the official economy is deeper and more persistent the larger the initial size of the unofficial sector. This implies that in less developed economies financial crises cause a relatively stronger reallocation of inputs towards less efficient sectors, expose a larger fraction of the population to the adverse effects of informality, cause a sharper deterioration of public finances limiting governments ability to supply public goods and to engage in countercyclical fiscal policies.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Market participation
Labor market frictions
Sociology and Political Science
050204 development studies
media_common.quotation_subject
Geography, Planning and Development
Population
Endogenous participation
Development
Financial crises
Settore SECS-P/01 - ECONOMIA POLITICA
0502 economics and business
Economics
Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium
050207 economics
education
media_common
Finance
education.field_of_study
Informal Economy
Informal sector
business.industry
Applied economics
05 social sciences
Public good
Large sample
Shock (economics)
Unemployment
Settore SECS-P/02 - politica economica
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 0305750X
- Volume :
- 119
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- World Development
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e29a2a8909e21938124c3d9851ba8d6b