Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador
This article estimates the impact of informality on profits using a new survey administered to 1,200 firms with less than 50 employees in four cities in Ecuador. The article proposes a novel definition of informality which explicitly recognises that most firms comply with some regulations but not ot...
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okr-10986-226972021-04-23T14:04:10Z Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador Medvedev, Denis Oviedo, Ana María informality profitability firm survey This article estimates the impact of informality on profits using a new survey administered to 1,200 firms with less than 50 employees in four cities in Ecuador. The article proposes a novel definition of informality which explicitly recognises that most firms comply with some regulations but not others. Accounting for firm selection and controlling for a large set of firm, owner and location characteristics, the article finds that more formal firms tend to be more profitable and have higher output per worker. This impact operates, inter alia, through improved access to credit and higher sales through issuance of tax receipts. 2015-09-28T16:38:43Z 2015-09-28T16:38:43Z 2015-08-13 Journal Article The Journal of Development Studies 0022-0388 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22697 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Journal Article Latin America & Caribbean Ecuador |
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Foreign Institution |
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Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
language |
en_US |
topic |
informality profitability firm survey |
spellingShingle |
informality profitability firm survey Medvedev, Denis Oviedo, Ana María Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
geographic_facet |
Latin America & Caribbean Ecuador |
description |
This article estimates the impact of informality on profits using a new survey administered to 1,200 firms with less than 50 employees in four cities in Ecuador. The article proposes a novel definition of informality which explicitly recognises that most firms comply with some regulations but not others. Accounting for firm selection and controlling for a large set of firm, owner and location characteristics, the article finds that more formal firms tend to be more profitable and have higher output per worker. This impact operates, inter alia, through improved access to credit and higher sales through issuance of tax receipts. |
format |
Journal Article |
author |
Medvedev, Denis Oviedo, Ana María |
author_facet |
Medvedev, Denis Oviedo, Ana María |
author_sort |
Medvedev, Denis |
title |
Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
title_short |
Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
title_full |
Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
title_fullStr |
Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
title_full_unstemmed |
Informality and Profitability : Evidence from a New Firm Survey in Ecuador |
title_sort |
informality and profitability : evidence from a new firm survey in ecuador |
publisher |
Taylor and Francis |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22697 |
_version_ |
1764451801508085760 |