Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America

Many governments across Latin America have been unable to reduce stubbornly high levels of labor informality and the lack of legal and social protection put informal workers in a situation of continuous economic peril and uncertainty. This paper argues that the inherent characteristics and condition...

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Main Author: Julán Acevedo-Pardo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2021-05-01
Series:Revista Latinoamericana de Opinión Pública
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/1852-9003/article/view/25920
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spelling doaj-44d7fc43a093471da502d3fc37f769f02021-06-07T06:53:28ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaRevista Latinoamericana de Opinión Pública1852-90032660-700X2021-05-0110110512810.14201/rlop.2592025920Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin AmericaJulán Acevedo-Pardo0University of MississippiMany governments across Latin America have been unable to reduce stubbornly high levels of labor informality and the lack of legal and social protection put informal workers in a situation of continuous economic peril and uncertainty. This paper argues that the inherent characteristics and conditions of informal workers act as noisy signals that diminish the effect that economic perceptions have on evaluations of the incumbent executive across Latin American countries. The empirical results support the argument, suggesting that the effect of perceptions of the economy on evaluations of the incumbent is lower among informal relative to formal workers. Furthermore, this dynamic is prevalent in urban areas where there is a more evident differentiation between formal and informal workers, and disappears in rural areas, where both formal and informal workers face challenges that produce noisy signals and diminish the effect of perceptions of the economy on evaluations of the incumbent.https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/1852-9003/article/view/25920labor informalityeconomic votingeconomic vulnerabilitynoisy signalslatin america
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julán Acevedo-Pardo
spellingShingle Julán Acevedo-Pardo
Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
Revista Latinoamericana de Opinión Pública
labor informality
economic voting
economic vulnerability
noisy signals
latin america
author_facet Julán Acevedo-Pardo
author_sort Julán Acevedo-Pardo
title Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
title_short Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
title_full Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
title_fullStr Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Labor Informality and Economic Political Accountability of Executive Incumbents in Latin America
title_sort labor informality and economic political accountability of executive incumbents in latin america
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
series Revista Latinoamericana de Opinión Pública
issn 1852-9003
2660-700X
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Many governments across Latin America have been unable to reduce stubbornly high levels of labor informality and the lack of legal and social protection put informal workers in a situation of continuous economic peril and uncertainty. This paper argues that the inherent characteristics and conditions of informal workers act as noisy signals that diminish the effect that economic perceptions have on evaluations of the incumbent executive across Latin American countries. The empirical results support the argument, suggesting that the effect of perceptions of the economy on evaluations of the incumbent is lower among informal relative to formal workers. Furthermore, this dynamic is prevalent in urban areas where there is a more evident differentiation between formal and informal workers, and disappears in rural areas, where both formal and informal workers face challenges that produce noisy signals and diminish the effect of perceptions of the economy on evaluations of the incumbent.
topic labor informality
economic voting
economic vulnerability
noisy signals
latin america
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/1852-9003/article/view/25920
work_keys_str_mv AT julanacevedopardo laborinformalityandeconomicpoliticalaccountabilityofexecutiveincumbentsinlatinamerica
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