期刊名称:Departmental Discussion Papers / University of Glasgow, Department of Economics
出版年度:2005
卷号:1
出版社:University of Glasgow, Department of Economics
摘要:This paper works at the interface of the literature exploring the raison d’etre
of the informal labor market and that explaining the real exchange rate appreciations
occurring in many Latin American countries during periods of reform. We first build a
small country-Australian style model where the informal sector is seen as an unregulated
non-tradables sector, augmented by heterogeneity in entrepreneurial ability and capital
adjustment costs. We then examine the behavior of the model with and without a formal
sector rigidity. We show that the co-movements of relative formal/informal incomes,
formal/informal sector size, and the real exchange rate can offer insight into the level of
distortion in the labor market and the source of ER fluctuations. We then explore time
series data from Brazil, Colombia and Mexico using multivariate co-integration
techniques to establish what “regime” each country is in at various periods of time.
Mexico, for instance, appears to be relative undistorted and the 1987-92 appreciation
appears to be largely a function of a boom in the non-tradables sector rather than wage
inertia. In spite of a secular expansion of the informal sector and there is little evidence
of dualism or of a rigidity driven appreciation of the Real, from 1993-1996. Post 1995
Colombia corresponds to a classic segmented labor market and an appreciation partly
driven by labor market rigidities. Graphical analysis suggests that neither the Argentine
appreciation (1988-1992) or the celebrated Chilean appreciation (1975-1982) were driven
by inertial forces.