Type | Working Paper |
Title | Informal sector formalization in Tanzania: An alternative approach |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | http://dare.uva.nl/cgi/arno/show.cgi?fid=54402 |
Abstract | Not all entrepreneurs fit Schumpeter’s description of creative genius. In the informal sectors of developing countries, there is considerable evidence that most do not. If the informal entrepreneur and informal employee aim for short-run subsistence rather than long-run profits, is a policy of skills development optimal for encouraging formalization of enterprises, or would another policy focus be more appropriate? This paper adapts an approach from Akos Rona-Tas (2001), which classifies entrepreneurial activity into two types: pro-cyclical profit-driven entrepreneurship, and countercyclical consumption-driven entrepreneurship. The latter forms the basis for a model of the sector-work decision in the Tanzanian labour market. In this model we assume that wage variance is highest in the informal sector, second highest in the formal private sector, and lowest in the public sector. We make assumptions of a similar style with regards to wage levels and expected job security. The result is a model which shows theoretically that for most workers, informal employment is at best a second-best option. The implication is that formalization policy in Tanzania could be more effective if its focus were shifted to expansion of formal private enterprise instead of direct formalization of informal enterprises. We argue that such a change might produce more favourable results in the effort toward formalization than the previous strategy of formalization-inducing skills development. |
» | Tanzania - Integrated Labor Force Survey 2000-2001 |