Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR

Trade facilitation projects often assume indirect benefits for small-scale, cross-border traders. Recent studies have shown the challenges faced in Africa by this population, especially women, but it remains unknown in Cambodia and the Lao People&#...

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Main Authors: Seror, Marlon, Record, Richard, Clarke, Julian
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/866341511272497583/Glass-barriers-constraints-to-womens-small-scale-cross-border-trade-in-Cambodia-and-Lao-PDR
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28910
id okr-10986-28910
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-289102021-06-08T14:42:47Z Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR Seror, Marlon Record, Richard Clarke, Julian GENDER INFORMAL SECTOR CORRUPTION TAX EVASION TRADE MICROENTERPRISE WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS Trade facilitation projects often assume indirect benefits for small-scale, cross-border traders. Recent studies have shown the challenges faced in Africa by this population, especially women, but it remains unknown in Cambodia and the Lao People's Democratic Republic, despite large trade facilitation investments. This paper fills this gap, thanks to an innovative mix of original qualitative and quantitative data from various checkpoints on the borders with Thailand and Vietnam. The quantitative data, collected in 2014, consist of an exhaustive list of trade-related border crossings during two to three days and a survey of 158 randomly selected small-scale, cross-border traders and brokers. The paper combines qualitative data and statistical techniques to shed light on the structure of the small-scale, cross-border trade economy, traders' and brokers' profiles, the challenges they face, and potential solutions, with a particular emphasis on gender. Key challenges pertain to taxation and poor infrastructures. Narrow roads, insufficient parking space, and restrictive border regulations on transportation means cause traffic jams and delays. These disproportionately affect women, who are more time constrained. Despite a rather moderate tax pressure, widespread informal payments erode traders' and brokers' willingness to comply with taxes. Women suffer from a higher tax rate and a tax schedule that deters them from upgrading to more profitable cross-border trade activities. Along with capital constraints, this finding may explain the lower share of women in small-scale, cross-border trade than among own-account workers and the self-employed, as evidenced by nationally representative data. The paper delineates policy implications and puts forward concrete steps. 2017-11-30T22:03:59Z 2017-11-30T22:03:59Z 2017-11 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/866341511272497583/Glass-barriers-constraints-to-womens-small-scale-cross-border-trade-in-Cambodia-and-Lao-PDR http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28910 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8249 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Cambodia Lao People's Democratic Republic
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic GENDER
INFORMAL SECTOR
CORRUPTION
TAX EVASION
TRADE
MICROENTERPRISE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
spellingShingle GENDER
INFORMAL SECTOR
CORRUPTION
TAX EVASION
TRADE
MICROENTERPRISE
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
Seror, Marlon
Record, Richard
Clarke, Julian
Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Cambodia
Lao People's Democratic Republic
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8249
description Trade facilitation projects often assume indirect benefits for small-scale, cross-border traders. Recent studies have shown the challenges faced in Africa by this population, especially women, but it remains unknown in Cambodia and the Lao People's Democratic Republic, despite large trade facilitation investments. This paper fills this gap, thanks to an innovative mix of original qualitative and quantitative data from various checkpoints on the borders with Thailand and Vietnam. The quantitative data, collected in 2014, consist of an exhaustive list of trade-related border crossings during two to three days and a survey of 158 randomly selected small-scale, cross-border traders and brokers. The paper combines qualitative data and statistical techniques to shed light on the structure of the small-scale, cross-border trade economy, traders' and brokers' profiles, the challenges they face, and potential solutions, with a particular emphasis on gender. Key challenges pertain to taxation and poor infrastructures. Narrow roads, insufficient parking space, and restrictive border regulations on transportation means cause traffic jams and delays. These disproportionately affect women, who are more time constrained. Despite a rather moderate tax pressure, widespread informal payments erode traders' and brokers' willingness to comply with taxes. Women suffer from a higher tax rate and a tax schedule that deters them from upgrading to more profitable cross-border trade activities. Along with capital constraints, this finding may explain the lower share of women in small-scale, cross-border trade than among own-account workers and the self-employed, as evidenced by nationally representative data. The paper delineates policy implications and puts forward concrete steps.
format Working Paper
author Seror, Marlon
Record, Richard
Clarke, Julian
author_facet Seror, Marlon
Record, Richard
Clarke, Julian
author_sort Seror, Marlon
title Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
title_short Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
title_full Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
title_fullStr Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
title_full_unstemmed Glass Barriers : Constraints to Women's Small-Scale Cross-Border Trade in Cambodia and Lao PDR
title_sort glass barriers : constraints to women's small-scale cross-border trade in cambodia and lao pdr
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/866341511272497583/Glass-barriers-constraints-to-womens-small-scale-cross-border-trade-in-Cambodia-and-Lao-PDR
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28910
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