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Algeria - Mali trade : the normality of informality

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TLDR
In this paper, the volume of informal trade between Algeria and Mali and analyzes its determinants and mechanisms, using a multi-pronged methodology, is estimated using satellite images and surveys with informal traders in Mali and Algeria.
Abstract
This paper estimates the volume of informal trade between Algeria and Mali and analyzes its determinants and mechanisms, using a multi-pronged methodology. First, the authors discuss how subsidy policies and the legal framework create incentives for informal trade across the Sahara. Second, the authors provide evidence of the importance of informal trade, drawing on satellite images and surveys with informal traders in Mali and Algeria. The authors estimate that the weekly turnover of informal trade fell from approximately United States (U.S.) 2 million dollars in 2011 to U.S. 0.74 million dollars in 2014, but continues to play a crucial role in the economies of northern Mali and southern Algeria. Profit margins of 20-30 percent on informal trade contribute to explaining the relative prosperity of northern Mali. The authors also show that official trade statistics are meaningless in this context, as they capture less than 3 percent of total trade. Finally, the authors provide qualitative evidence on informal trade actors and mechanisms for the most frequently traded products.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Informal Income Opportunities and Urban Employment in Ghana

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the economic activities of the low-income section of the labour force in Accra, the urban sub-proletariat into which the unskilled and illiterate majority of Frafra migrants are drawn.
BookDOI

Conditional cash transfers : reducing present and future poverty

TL;DR: Conditional cash transfers (CCTs) are programs that transfer cash, generally to poor households, on the condition that those households make pre specified investments in the human capital of their children.
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Tax rates and tax evasion: evidence from "missing imports" in china

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantify the effects of tax rates on tax evasion by examining the relationship in China between the tariff schedule and the "evasion gap", which is defined as the difference between Hong Kong's reported exports to China at the product level and China's reported imports from Hong Kong.
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