The long-and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and trade openness in Uganda
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cogent Economics & Finance
Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between the shadow economy and
trade openness in Uganda, using autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing
approach. We find that the shadow economy and trade openness have a long- and
short-run relationship. These results hold even when alternative econometric methods
are used. The empirical evidence indicates that more exposure to foreign trade sig-
nificantly reduces the size of the shadow economy. This could imply that as countries
become more integrated into the world economy, firms and individual entrepreneurs
are induced to engage in the formal sector so as to reap the benefits of international
markets. This paper shows that trade openness is an important determinant of the
shadow economy in both the short- and long-run. At the policy level, any policy
framework that strengthens integration into the global economy will be an effective
tool that can reduce shadow activities in both the short- and long-run. The practical
implication of these results is that countries that have fully reformed their economies
to allow for free trade and investment inflows experience a decline in shadow activities
implying that, in more open economies, more trade reduces informality.
Description
Keywords
Globalization, Informal sector, Shadow economy, Trade, Trade openness
Citation
Esaku, S. (2021). The long-and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and trade openness in Uganda. Cogent Economics & Finance, 9(1), 1930886.