2019
DOI: 10.2478/jeb-2019-0001
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Evaluating the Prevalence and Distribution of Unregistered Employment in Kosovo: Lessons from a 2017 Survey

Abstract: Despite the growing recognition that unregistered employment remains a common problem both in South-East Europe and well beyond, there has been little evidence available on its prevalence and distribution. This paper contributes to filling the gap, by utilising data from a 2017 large scale national representative survey of 8,533 households in Kosovo. This reveals that 34.6% of all employees are engaged in unregistered employment (i.e., they have no employment contract). A Probit regression analysis reveals sig… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…First, there are unregistered employees, where the employees are wholly undeclared and have no written contract of employment (Gashi & Williams, 2019;Krasniqi & Williams, 2017 (Williams & Horodnic, 2020). These workers will be excluded from the current short-term financial support for employees and depending on the system of social insurance in countries, also perhaps from welfare benefits.…”
Section: Coronavirus the Tourism Industry And Undeclared Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, there are unregistered employees, where the employees are wholly undeclared and have no written contract of employment (Gashi & Williams, 2019;Krasniqi & Williams, 2017 (Williams & Horodnic, 2020). These workers will be excluded from the current short-term financial support for employees and depending on the system of social insurance in countries, also perhaps from welfare benefits.…”
Section: Coronavirus the Tourism Industry And Undeclared Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The estimated level of informal employment by the Kosovo Labour Force Survey (LFS) varies from 26.3% in 2016 to 13.4% in 2019, which can be mainly attributed to data quality rather than any improvements in formalisation. A large scale and rigorous Labour Force and Time Use Survey (LFTUS) conducted in 2017 and commissioned by the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) in Kosovo reveals that 34.6% of waged employees do not have a formal contract (Gashi and Williams, 2019), which is similar to a Reinvest survey (2017).…”
Section: Data Variables and Methodologymentioning
confidence: 92%
“…To change this cost/benefit ratio to make declared work a rational choice, European governments focused upon raising the costs of participating in undeclared work. This was achieved by increasing the sanctions and probability of detection and doing this was widely accepted by European governments as the most important and effective way of transforming undeclared work into undeclared work (see Williams 2019). The result was that scholars and governments paid little attention to increasing the benefits of declared work to change the cost/benefit ratio.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Turning to undeclared workers, three types exist. Firstly, there are unregistered employees, where the employees are wholly undeclared and have no written contract of employment (Gashi and Williams 2019;Krasniki and Williams 2017). A 2013 EU-wide survey finds that one in 20 (5 per cent) in employment reported not having a written contract of employment.…”
Section: Coronavirus and Its Impacts On The Undeclared Economymentioning
confidence: 99%