Do Inequality, Corruption, and Informality Matter?

From a paper by João Tovar Jalles, Carola Pessino, and Ana Cristina Calderon:

“Widening income disparities, higher corruption, and increased informality in many emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs)—all with pressing and mounting fiscal problems—have rekindled interest in the empirical analysis of the key factors determining the occurrence of fiscal consolidations. Using discrete choice models, this paper examines the drivers of fiscal consolidation episodes in a sample of 148 EMDEs between 1980 and 2019, with a focus on Latin American and Caribbean countries. Inequality does not seem to drive consolidations—which are more likely during good economic times—while more informality increases the probability of their occurrence and corruption decreases it. In turn, when examining the drivers of successful consolidations, larger income inequality acts as a boost, while informality is a hinderance. In fact, while the size of the public investment multiplier in Latin America and the Caribbean is larger than in other regions, when informality is high, the multiplier effect is reduced to a much lower and insignificant magnitude. Results are robust to several sensitivity and robustness tests.”

Posted by at 7:13 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

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