000 01788nam a22001697a 4500
999 _c513705
_d513705
008 200405b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aEarly, Bryan
_918802
245 _aSearching in the shadows: The impact of economic sanctions on informal economies
260 _bPolitical Research Quarterly
300 _a72(4), Dec, 2019: p.821-834.
520 _aTo date, most research on the consequences of sanctions has explored how foreign economic pressure influences the formal sector of targeted economies. This study instead focuses on explaining the ways in which economic sanctions might affect the size and growth of informal economies. We assert that the sanctions-induced economic disruptions and hardships in target economies distort the normal incentive structure that affected firms and individuals have for doing business in the formal economy, leading them to increase their participation in the shadow sector. To assess our theory, we conduct a global quantitative analysis of sanctions’ effects on size and growth of their targets’ informal economies from 1971 to 2005. Employing a wide variety of estimators and robustness checks to evaluate the direction of causality, we find strong evidence that economic sanctions increase their targets’ informal economies. This suggests that economic sanctions do not just harm their targets’ economies; they actually alter how their constituents participate in them. This has significant implications for efforts to understand the broader economic consequences of sanctions. - Reproduced.
650 _aEconomic sanctions, Shadow economies, Coercive diplomacy, Illicit economic activity
_918803
700 _aPeksen, Dursun
_916997
773 _aPolitical Research Quarterly
906 _aECONOMIC SANCTIONS
942 _cAR