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Minimum Wages, Inequality, and the Informal Sector
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 84

Minimum Wages, Inequality, and the Informal Sector

How do minimum wages affect earnings inequality in countries with large informal sectors? I provide reduced-form evidence that the 2000s minimum wage hike in Brazil raised overall inequality by increasing inequality inside the informal sector. I develop a model where heterogeneous firms select into informality to investigate when and how raising the minimum wage can increase inequality. I calibrate the model to Brazil and find that, by generating substantial informality, the increase in the minimum wage raised overall inequality by 6.4%. These results suggest that movements into and out of the informal sector modulate the effects of formal labor legislation.

Non-traded Gains From Trade - Selection in the Non-Traded Sector: Evidence from Brazil
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 45

Non-traded Gains From Trade - Selection in the Non-Traded Sector: Evidence from Brazil

We investigate how trade shocks affect the allocation of labor across plants at the local labor market level. Using Brazil’s import liberalization as a quasi-natural experiment, we uncover a new margin for the gains from trade: the reallocation of labor from smaller to larger producers in the non-traded sector. We find that in response to liberalization, larger non-traded producers self-select into importing, expanding as they gain access to inputs from abroad. We then develop a parsimonious model of heterogeneous producers incorporating this mechanism. The theory is consistent with the empirical findings and show that reallocation among non-traded producers is welfare-enhancing. In contrast, this reallocation effect disappears when all nontraded producers make the same importing decision.

Climate and Cross-Border Migration
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 45

Climate and Cross-Border Migration

Our work is positioned at the intersection of migration and climate change—two key forces shaping the economic outlook of many countries. The analysis explores: (i) the relative importance of origincountry vs destination-country factors in explaining migration patterns; (ii) importance of climate disasters as driver of cross-border migration; and (iii) the importance of climate-driven migration on the overall impact of climate on macroeconomic outcomes. It arrives at the following main findings. First, both origin-country and destination-country contribute to explaining migration outflows from EMDEs, although only the global shocks seem important for advanced economies. Second, climate dis...

How Far Has Globalization Gone? A Tale of Two Regions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 32

How Far Has Globalization Gone? A Tale of Two Regions

We study the evolution of trade globalization in a set of countries in Latin America (mostly the largest ones) and Asia over the past 25 years. Relying on structural gravity models, we first estimate a proxy of trade globalization that captures the ease of trading internationally with respect to trading domestically. Results indicate that the evolution of trade globalization since the mid-1990s has been similar between the two regions, but very heterogeneous within them. Trade globalization has been particularly strong in agriculture, mining and manufacturing, but has lagged in services. The paper also documents that trade globalization has been particularly strong in agriculture, mining and...

Belize
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 20

Belize

Belize: Selected Issues

Belize
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 22

Belize

Belize: Selected Issues

Regional Economic Outlook, Western Hemisphere, October 2023
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 44

Regional Economic Outlook, Western Hemisphere, October 2023

After a stronger-than-expected recovery from the pandemic and continued resilience in early 2023, economic growth in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) is softening as the effect of tighter policies to combat inflation is taking hold and the external environment is weakening. The early and swift monetary tightening across the region since 2021, together with the withdrawal of most of the pandemic fiscal stimulus and the reversal of external price pressures, have helped put headline inflation on a downward trajectory. Core inflation has also started to ease, as price pressures are becoming less generalized, although it remains elevated amid strong labor markets and positive output gaps in some countries. Banking systems have weathered the rise in interest rates well and are generally healthy, though credit to the private sector is decelerating amid tighter supply conditions and weaker demand.

Perspectivas Econômicas, As Américas, Out 2023
  • Language: pt-BR
  • Pages: 45

Perspectivas Econômicas, As Américas, Out 2023

Na esteira de uma recuperação mais forte do que o esperado após a pandemia e de uma resiliência continua no início de 2023, o crescimento econômico na América Latina e no Caribe (ALC) está diminuindo à medida que o efeito das políticas mais restritivas de combate à inflação está se consolidando e a conjuntura externa está se enfraquecendo. O aperto monetário rápido e antecipado na região desde 2021, combinado com a retirada da maior parte dos estímulos fiscais para fazer face à pandemia e a reversão das pressões inflacionárias externas, ajudou a posicionar a inflação geral numa trajetória de queda. O núcleo de inflação também começou a recuar à medida que as pressões sobre os preços se tornaram menos generalizadas, embora permaneça elevado em meio à força dos mercados de trabalho e a hiatos do produto positivos em alguns países. Os sistemas bancários resistiram bem à elevação dos juros e, de modo geral, estão saudáveis, embora o crédito ao setor privado esteja desacelerando em meio a condições de oferta mais restritas e uma demanda mais fraca.

Trade Diversion Effects from Global Tensions—Higher Than We Think
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 62

Trade Diversion Effects from Global Tensions—Higher Than We Think

The paper builds a unique industry-level dataset by combining Mexico’s nationally sourced inputoutput data (INEGI) with cross-country sources (WIOD, UN Comtrade). Using this dataset to exploit higher supply linkages across a larger number of industries than what is available in cross-country sources, the paper estimates the trade diversion effect on Mexico’s exports to the U.S. from two episodes, with a focus on the first: the U.S.-China trade tension in 2018 and the U.S. sanctions on Russia in 2014. Difference-in-differences, local projections and few other empirical methodologies are used. For the first episode, the paper finds higher trade diversion effects than estimates in literatur...

Perspectivas Económicas, Las Américas, Oct 2023
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 46

Perspectivas Económicas, Las Américas, Oct 2023

Tras una recuperación más vigorosa de lo esperado después de la pandemia y la continuidad de la resiliencia a comienzos de 2023, el crecimiento económico en América Latina y el Caribe está desacelerándose a medida que las políticas más restrictivas para combatir la inflación surten efecto y se debilita el entorno externo. El oportuno y rápido endurecimiento monetario en la región desde 2021, sumado al repliegue de la mayor parte del estímulo fiscal relacionado con la pandemia y la reversión de las presiones de los precios externos, ha ayudado a colocar la inflación en una trayectoria descendente. Conforme las presiones de los precios se tornan menos generalizadas, la inflación subyacente también ha empezado a ceder, aunque se mantiene elevada, en un contexto de dinamismo de los mercados laborales y brechas del producto positivas en algunos países. Los sistemas bancarios navegaron favorablemente la subida de las tasas de interés y en general son saludables, pero el crédito al sector privado se está desacelerando, en medio de condiciones de oferta más restrictivas y una demanda más débil.