“…Over the past few decades, a shift has taken place away from eradicating informal employment and towards facilitating its formalisation as it has been recognised that the intention in tackling informal employment is to address the growth of the formal economy, decent work, fuller employment and increasing tax revenue to support wider societal objectives (Chen, 2012;Williams and Lansky, 2013). To achieve this, the vast majority of the policy debate has revolved around whether targeted repressive measures and/or targeted incentives are most effective at facilitating formalisation (Dibben and Williams, 2012;Eurofound, 2013;Feld and Larsen, 2012;OECD, 2012;Williams and Lansky, 2013;Williams and Nadin, 2012a, 2012b. This paper, however and in contrast to this conventional policy debate, reveals that broader economic and social policy measures are also important.…”