Subsidizing Informality?: Non-contributory Public Spending in Latin America and the Caribbean

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Date issued
September 2018
Subject
Working Condition;
Informal Labor;
Public Expenditure
JEL code
H53 - Government Expenditures and Welfare Programs;
H55 - Social Security and Public Pensions;
J38 - Public Policy
Country
Colombia;
Costa Rica;
Argentina;
Bolivia;
Brazil;
Chile;
Ecuador;
El Salvador;
Jamaica;
Mexico;
Guatemala;
Honduras;
Nicaragua;
Uruguay;
Paraguay;
Peru
Category
Technical Notes
This paper presents new data documenting the level and evolution of public spending on non-contributory programs for 16 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. Salaried formal workers contribute to social security and in return have access to an array of benefits -mainly old-age pensions and health services. In recent decades, informal workers – salaried and non-salaried- have gained access to similar benefits, financed through general revenues. Our calculations indicate that, on average, the region spends 1.7% of GDP in these programs. Although they were created in response to social demands, by targeting informal workers these programs may create a behavioral response -i.e. more informality. This paper does not attempt to measure behavioral effects. Its main contribution is to be the first to document this “subsidy to informality” following a common methodology across countries and years in the region.