Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy

This paper develops a model of sequential job search to understand the factors determining the effect of tax and enforcement policies on the size (i.e., employment share) of informal sector. The focus is on the role of informal sector as a stepping stone to formal jobs. I argue that the stepping-sto...

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Main Author: Semih Tümen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-09-01
Series:Central Bank Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070116300300
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spelling doaj-1c991e23dd0b47f2be6656efe43f8bc32020-11-24T22:02:17ZengElsevierCentral Bank Review1303-07012016-09-0116310911710.1016/j.cbrev.2016.08.002Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policySemih Tümen0Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, TurkeyThis paper develops a model of sequential job search to understand the factors determining the effect of tax and enforcement policies on the size (i.e., employment share) of informal sector. The focus is on the role of informal sector as a stepping stone to formal jobs. I argue that the stepping-stone role of informal jobs is an important concept determining how strongly government policies affect the size of informal sector. I measure the extent of the stepping-stone role with the intensity of skill accumulation in the informal sector. If informal jobs help workers acquire skills, gain expertise, and build professional networks for boosting the chances to switch to a formal job, then the size of informal sector is less sensitive to government policy. In this case, the option value of a job in informal sector will be high and a worker with an informal job will not rush to switch to a formal job when a policy encouraging formal employment is in effect. If, on the other hand, informal sector does not provide satisfactory training opportunities, then the size of informal sector becomes more sensitive to government policy. Calibrating the model to the Brazilian data, I perform numerical exercises confirming that the effect of government policy on the size of informal sector is a decreasing function of the intensity of skill acquisition in the informal sector.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070116300300Informal sectorStepping stoneGovernment policyJob searchHuman capitalOption value
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Semih Tümen
spellingShingle Semih Tümen
Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
Central Bank Review
Informal sector
Stepping stone
Government policy
Job search
Human capital
Option value
author_facet Semih Tümen
author_sort Semih Tümen
title Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
title_short Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
title_full Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
title_fullStr Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
title_full_unstemmed Informality as a stepping stone: A search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
title_sort informality as a stepping stone: a search-theoretical assessment of informal sector and government policy
publisher Elsevier
series Central Bank Review
issn 1303-0701
publishDate 2016-09-01
description This paper develops a model of sequential job search to understand the factors determining the effect of tax and enforcement policies on the size (i.e., employment share) of informal sector. The focus is on the role of informal sector as a stepping stone to formal jobs. I argue that the stepping-stone role of informal jobs is an important concept determining how strongly government policies affect the size of informal sector. I measure the extent of the stepping-stone role with the intensity of skill accumulation in the informal sector. If informal jobs help workers acquire skills, gain expertise, and build professional networks for boosting the chances to switch to a formal job, then the size of informal sector is less sensitive to government policy. In this case, the option value of a job in informal sector will be high and a worker with an informal job will not rush to switch to a formal job when a policy encouraging formal employment is in effect. If, on the other hand, informal sector does not provide satisfactory training opportunities, then the size of informal sector becomes more sensitive to government policy. Calibrating the model to the Brazilian data, I perform numerical exercises confirming that the effect of government policy on the size of informal sector is a decreasing function of the intensity of skill acquisition in the informal sector.
topic Informal sector
Stepping stone
Government policy
Job search
Human capital
Option value
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1303070116300300
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