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Article
The Determinants of Informality in Mexico's States
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Year: 2013 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Abstract

Informality has important implications for productivity, economic growth, and the inequality of income. In recent years, the extent of informal employment has increased in many of Mexico's states, though highly heterogeneously. The substantial differences across states in terms of informal employment can be helpful in explaining differences in economic growth outcomes. This paper studies the determinants of informal employment using states' diverging outcomes to identify causal factors, taking into account potential endogeneity. The results suggest that multiple factors explain differences in informal employment across states, including per capita income, the quality of labour skills, differences in the prevalence of microenterprises, the cost to start a business, restrictions on foreign investment, the rule of law and incidence of corruption.

Keywords

Economics --- Mexico


Article
Fast-Falling Barriers and Growing Concentration : The Emergence of a Private Economy in China
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Year: 2005 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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This paper assesses the progress of China’s transition toward a market economy by examining the structure of ownership, productivity, and profitability, as well as the concentration of production across firms, industries and regions. It does this by analyzing a database of firm microdata of the quarter of a million industrial companies in operation during the 1998–2003 period. Results show that the private sector now accounts for more than half of industrial output, compared with barely more than a quarter in 1998, and operates much more efficiently than the public sector. Higher productivity has fed through to profitability, motivating greater regional specialization of production. These changes are consistent with what would be expected in a market-based economy, and suggests that reforms are making rapid progress. This Working Paper relates to the 2005 OECD Economic Survey of China (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/china).


Article
Improving Human Capital Formation in India
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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The provision of high-quality education and health care to all of the population is considered a core element of public policy in most countries. In India, the government is active in both education and health but the private sector also plays an important role, notably for heath, and to a lesser extent in education. At present, the quality and quantity of the outputs from education, and also form public health care, are holding back the process of economic development. Steps are being taken to draw more children into primary education and the paper considers ways to keep children in school. It also considers institutional changes that may help to improve the performance of the educational system and so boost human capital formation. This working Paper relates to the 2007 Economic Survey of India (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/india).

Keywords

Economics --- India


Article
Fast-Falling Barriers and Growing Concentration : The Emergence of a Private Economy in China
Authors: ---
Year: 2005 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Abstract

This paper assesses the progress of China’s transition toward a market economy by examining the structure of ownership, productivity, and profitability, as well as the concentration of production across firms, industries and regions. It does this by analyzing a database of firm microdata of the quarter of a million industrial companies in operation during the 1998–2003 period. Results show that the private sector now accounts for more than half of industrial output, compared with barely more than a quarter in 1998, and operates much more efficiently than the public sector. Higher productivity has fed through to profitability, motivating greater regional specialization of production. These changes are consistent with what would be expected in a market-based economy, and suggests that reforms are making rapid progress. This Working Paper relates to the 2005 OECD Economic Survey of China (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/china).


Article
The Determinants of Informality in Mexico's States
Authors: ---
Year: 2013 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Abstract

Informality has important implications for productivity, economic growth, and the inequality of income. In recent years, the extent of informal employment has increased in many of Mexico's states, though highly heterogeneously. The substantial differences across states in terms of informal employment can be helpful in explaining differences in economic growth outcomes. This paper studies the determinants of informal employment using states' diverging outcomes to identify causal factors, taking into account potential endogeneity. The results suggest that multiple factors explain differences in informal employment across states, including per capita income, the quality of labour skills, differences in the prevalence of microenterprises, the cost to start a business, restrictions on foreign investment, the rule of law and incidence of corruption.

Keywords

Economics --- Mexico


Article
Could Mexico become the new ‘China'? : Policy drivers of competitiveness and productivity
Authors: ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Over the last decade, Mexico’s unit labour costs decreased relative to other emerging markets’, especially compared to China’s. This decrease boosted Mexico’s trade competitiveness, particularly in the manufacturing sector. However, Mexico’s increasing competitiveness masks one of the country’s fundamental concerns, which is the absence of productivity improvements. The aim of this paper is two-fold: first, we examine the evolution of total factor productivity in Mexico’s manufacturing sector, as compared to China’s. Firm-level data is employed to analyse the distribution and characteristics of productivity across Mexico’s regions. Second, using regional data for the period 2005–2012, we study the policy impediments behind sluggish productivity improvements, particularly to determine how labour informality may have contributed. The study takes advantage of Mexico’s heterogeneity across regions in terms of productivity, market regulation, financial constraints and firm size to identify economic policies that can help to boost productivity in the future.


Article
Improving Human Capital Formation in India
Authors: ---
Year: 2008 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Abstract

The provision of high-quality education and health care to all of the population is considered a core element of public policy in most countries. In India, the government is active in both education and health but the private sector also plays an important role, notably for heath, and to a lesser extent in education. At present, the quality and quantity of the outputs from education, and also form public health care, are holding back the process of economic development. Steps are being taken to draw more children into primary education and the paper considers ways to keep children in school. It also considers institutional changes that may help to improve the performance of the educational system and so boost human capital formation. This working Paper relates to the 2007 Economic Survey of India (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/india).

Keywords

Economics --- India


Article
Import Competition, Domestic Regulation and Firm-Level Productivity Growth in the OECD
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Year: 2012 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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This paper examines how import penetration affects firms' productivity growth taking into account the heterogeneity in firms' distance to the efficiency frontier and country differences in product market regulation. Using firm-level data for a large number of OECD countries, the analysis reveals non-linear effects of both sectoral import penetration and de jure product market regulation measures depending on firms' positions along the global distribution of productivity levels. The heterogeneous effects of international competition and domestic product market regulation on firm-level productivity growth are consistent with a neo-Schumpeterian view of trade and regulation. Close to the technology frontier, import competition has a strongly positive effect on firm-level productivity growth, with stringent domestic regulation reducing this effect substantially. However, far from the frontier, neither import competition nor its interaction with domestic regulation has a statistically significant effect on firm-level productivity growth. The results suggest that insufficient attention has been made in the trade literature to within-firm productivity growth.

Keywords

Economics


Book
Evaluating Fiscal Equalisation : Finding the Right Balance
Authors: ---
Year: 2021 Publisher: Paris OECD Publishing

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Abstract

Fiscal equalisation refers to the transfer of financial resources to and between subnationalgovernments with the aim of mitigating regional differences in fiscal capacity andexpenditure needs. However, the determination of fiscal capacity and expenditure needs isnot a straightforward task. OECD countries use widely varying mechanism designapproaches in their equalisation systems. This paper compares national approaches,covering the three modes of fiscal equalisation: pure revenue equalisation, revenue/costequalisation and gap-filling equalisation, describing the distinct impacts of each approachon subnational revenue disparities. A clear inverse relationship emerges between the sizeof the cost-equalising component within a system and the percentage change in subnationalper capita revenue disparities after equalising transfers are applied, although nosignificant relationship emerges between equalisation and regional convergence.Keywords: fiscal federalism, fiscal equalisation systems, inter-governmental transfers,regional inequality, public economics.

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Book
Ageing and Fiscal Challenges across Levels of Government
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9789264360266 Year: 2020 Publisher: Paris OECD Publishing

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The consequences of population ageing at subnational government levels can beparticularly intense, with many local governments vulnerable to the ageing of theirpopulations from a fiscal perspective. The economic and fiscal challenges of an ageingpopulation go beyond intergovernmental boundaries and require complex policy responses.In order to make fiscal frameworks “ageing resilient”, countries require coherent fiscalstrategies that focus on tax and spending reforms, with a whole-of-government approachthat brings together central governments, as well as sub-central governments. Re-designingfiscal frameworks to deal with these vulnerabilities is essential to make our economiesmore sustainable going forward.

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