showSidebars ==
showTitleBreadcrumbs == 1
node.field_disable_title_breadcrumbs.value ==

SMU SOE Seminar Series (August 2, 2024) Trade, Labor Economics and Development Economics

Please click here if you are unable to view this page.

 
 

TOPIC:

TRADE, LABOR ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS

ABSTRACT

We examine the effects of international trade in the presence of a set of domestic distortions giving rise to informality, a prevalent phenomenon in developing countries. In our quantitative model, the informal sector arises from burdensome taxes and regulations that are imperfectly enforced by the government. Consequently, smaller, less productive firms face fewer distortions than larger, more productive ones, potentially leading to substantial misallocation. We show that in settings with a large informal sector, the gains from trade are significantly amplified, as reductions in trade barriers imply a reallocation of resources from initially less distorted to more distorted firms. We confirm findings from earlier reduced-form studies that the informal sector mitigates the impact of negative labor demand shocks on unemployment. Nonetheless, the informal sector can exacerbate the adverse welfare effects of economic downturns, amplifying misallocation. Last, our research sheds light on the relationship between trade openness and cross-firm wage inequality.

JEL Codes: F14, F16, J46, O17

Click here to view the CV.
Click here to view the paper.

PRESENTER

Rafael Dix-Carneiro
Duke University

RESEARCH FIELDS

International Trade
Labor Economics
Development Economics

DATE:

2 August 2024 (Friday)

TIME:

4pm - 5.30pm

VENUE:

Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903

 

© Copyright 2024 by Singapore Management University. All Rights Reserved.
Internal recipients of SMU, please visit https://smu.sg/emailrules, on how to filter away this EDM.
For all other recipients, please click here to unsubscribe.