2008
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1147794
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Measuring Underground (Unobserved, Non-Observed, Unrecorded) Economies in Transition Countries: Can We Trust GDP?

Abstract: This paper compiles alternative estimates of underground economies in twenty five transition countries during the transition decade and finds a disturbing lack of convergence between them, calling into question the reliability of GDP figures (which in varying degrees now include non-transparent imputations for the "nonobserved economy") as well as the macro model estimates of the unrecorded economy. A corollary of this finding is that substantive results from many studies examining the consequences of the radi… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(20 reference statements)
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“…Finally, applying the same MIMIC method to the Spanish case, Alañón and Gómez-Antonio (2005) find a considerable shadow economy, measuring between 8 and 18.8% of GDP in the period , and demonstrate that the shadow economy is significantly influenced by the tax burden, the degree of regulation and unit labor costs. Some indirect methods have been criticized because of the questionable basic assumptions and the unreliable macroeconomic estimates on which they rely (Schneider and Enste, 2000;Ahumada et al, 2007;Feige and Urban, 2008).…”
Section: Undeclared Work and Its Measurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, applying the same MIMIC method to the Spanish case, Alañón and Gómez-Antonio (2005) find a considerable shadow economy, measuring between 8 and 18.8% of GDP in the period , and demonstrate that the shadow economy is significantly influenced by the tax burden, the degree of regulation and unit labor costs. Some indirect methods have been criticized because of the questionable basic assumptions and the unreliable macroeconomic estimates on which they rely (Schneider and Enste, 2000;Ahumada et al, 2007;Feige and Urban, 2008).…”
Section: Undeclared Work and Its Measurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, GDP is often inadequately measured in developing countries due to the poor governmental statistical infrastructure [2,3]. Worse, economic statistical data Compared with DMSP-OLS, therefore, NPP-VIIRS provides a more powerful approach to research the nighttime light.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…27 It should be noted that the widely cited and severely critiqued (Breusch, 2005, a, b, c;2006) MIMIC model estimates are all presumably based on some highly simplified, albeit undocumented, currency demand approach. 28 Similar concerns are expressed in Feige and Urban (2008) in their investigation of estimates of the "unrecorded" economy in transition countries.…”
mentioning
confidence: 84%
“…See Feige (1989) and Feige and Urban (2008). d) The ratio of currency to checkable deposits in the observed sector is constant over time.…”
Section: Appendix A: the General Currency Ratio (Gcr) Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%