“…A report by the World Bank (, p. 23) states that a third of developing economies do not have any social protection policy or strategy, and the number of such countries has grown very recently, meaning that the effects of many of these programs have yet to be seen. In the absence of social protection, informality is widely tolerated because it provides people with an alternative, in the absence of, for example, unemployment insurance (as argued in Vodopivec, ; Robalino and Weber, ; Margolis et al ., ; Charlot et al ., , among others) and/or a minimum wage (as argued by, among others, Basu et al ., , ).…”