List of figures
List of tables
List of abbreviations
Notes on contributors
I. Introduction
1: Gary S. Fields, Tim Gindling, Kunal Sen, Michael Danquah, and
Simone Schotte: The job ladder
2: Gary S. Fields: Informality and work status
II. Asia
3: Carl Lin, Linxiang Ye, and Wei Zhang: Transforming informal work
and livelihoods in China
4: Rajesh Raj Natarajan, Simone Schotte, and Kunal Sen: Moving up
or down the job ladder in India: Examining informality-formality
transitions
5: Mayang Rizky, Daniel Suryadarma, and Asep Suryahadi: Progress
and stagnation in the livelihood of informal workers in an emerging
economy
III. Latin America
6: Enrique Alaniz, T.H. Gindling, Catherine Mata, and Diego Rojas:
Transforming informal work and livelihoods in Costa Rica and
Nicaragua
7: Roxana Maurizio and Ana Paula Monsalvo: Informality, labour
transitions, and the livelihoods of workers in Latin America
8: Enrique Alaniz, Alma Espino, and T.H. Gindling: Self-employment
and labour market dynamics of men and women in El Salvador and
Nicaragua
9: Robert Duval-Hernández: Informal work in urban Mexico:
characteristics, dynamics, and workers' preferences
IV. Sub-Saharan Africa
10: Sènakpon Fidèle A. Dedehouanou, and Didier Y. Alia: Dynamics of
off-farm self-employment in the West African Sahel
11: Abiodun O. Folawewo and Olusegun A. Orija: Informal-formal
workers' transition in Nigeria: A livelihood analysis
12: Michael Danquah, Simone Schotte, and Kunal Sen: Informal-formal
transitions in work status in sub-Saharan Africa: A comparative
perspective
V. North Africa and the Middle East
13: Shireen AlAzzawi and Vladimir Hlasny: Evolution of vulnerable
employment in Egypt, Jordan, and Tunisia
VI. Lessons Learnt
14: Gary S. Fields, T.H. Gindling, Kunal Sen, Michael Danquah, and
Simone Schotte: How to transform informal work and livelihoods?
Lessons learnt and policy options
Appendix A: Work status definition and operationalization
Appendix B: Job ladder
Appendix C: Work status dynamics
Index
Gary S. Fields is the John P. Windmuller Professor of International
and Comparative Labor and Professor of Economics at Cornell
University, Program Coordinator of the IZA Institute for Labor
Economics Program on Labor and Development, and a UNU-WIDER
Non-Resident Senior Research Fellow. He has been an Ivy League
teacher and professor for fifty years, first at Yale University and
then at Cornell University. He teaches and conducts research on
labor economics and
development economics. He is the 2014 winner of the IZA Prize in
Labor Economics, the top world-wide award in the field, and a
three-time winner of the General Mills Foundation Award for
Exemplary
Graduate Teaching.
Tim Gindling is Professor of Economics, Affiliate Professor of
Public Policy, and the 2020-2021 Lipitz Professor of Arts,
Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Maryland
Baltimore County (UMBC). His research focuses on the study of
factors influencing the distribution of wages, income, and work in
developing economies. He has been a Visiting Professor at the
University of Costa Rica and the National Autonomous University of
Costa Rica, and is the subject editor for economic
development of the IZA World of Labor. His publications include the
book Toward More Efficient and Effective Public Social Spending in
Central America (with Pablo Acosta, Rita Almeida and Christine Lao
Peña)
and over 40 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters.
Kunal Sen is Director of UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, and Professor of
Development Economics at the Global Development Institute,
University of Manchester. He has three decades of experienced in
applied development economics research. He has authored eight books
and is the editor of five volumes on the economics and political
economy of development. His main area of research is the political
economy of growth and development, international finance, the
dynamics of poverty, social exclusion, female
labour force participation, and the informal sector in developing
economies. He was awarded the Sanjaya Lall Prize in 2006 and the
Dudley Seers Prize in 2003 for his publications. Michael Danquah is
a
Research Fellow at UNU-WIDER. He is a development economist
currently serving as focal point for the projects 'Transforming
informal work and livelihoods' and 'African Cities' projects. He
previously worked in the Department of Economics at the University
of Ghana, Legon, and his research interests are in economic
development in sub-Saharan Africa, primarily focussing on issues
such as informality and productivity growth, among others. His work
has been published in journals such as
Journal of Development Studies, Journal of Economic Behavior &
Organization, and Small Business Economics.
Simone Schotte is a Visiting Researcher at UNU-WIDER. She is a
development economist focusing on inequality, social
stratification, and labour markets research. She holds a PhD from
the University of Göttingen, and prior to her time at UNU-WIDER,
she worked at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies
(GIGA) and was a consultant to the World Bank. Her research has
been published in journals such as World Development, Journal of
Economic Inequality, Journal of
Development Studies, Kyklos, and International Migration Review,
among others.
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