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The Underground Economy: Crash Course Econ #32 - YouTube
Channel: CrashCourse
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Hi, I鈥檓 Adriene Hill. This is Crash Course Economics, and today, we鈥檙e talking about the underground economy,
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the shadow economy, the informal economy, the black market, the unofficial economy, the hidden economy.
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Whatever you want to call it, today we鈥檙e looking off the books, under the table, at the underground economy.
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[Theme Music]
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So what exactly do we mean when we talk about
the underground economy?
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The first thing that comes to mind is the illegal stuff, bad guy stuff, like making and dealing drugs or selling kidneys.
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But when economists talk about it, they鈥檙e talking about a much wider, less-nefarious group of activities.
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The informal economy they talk about is all
the trade and work that happens off the books,
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under the table, outside of the sight and
reach of government rules and taxes.
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And sure, some of those activities are illegal
but a lot of them are completely mundane.
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Take the mom who cuts hair out of her house
without a license from the state.
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The guy who sells fruit on the side of the road. The nanny and housekeeper who get paid off the books.
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Or you -- when you babysit or when you sold
lemonade on the street corner.
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All that work and the money it made can be
considered part of the informal economy.
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As you might guess, it鈥檚 hard to measure
exactly how big this underground economy is.
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Which makes some sense.
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It can be hard to get people who fly under the radar to answer survey questions about their wages.
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Excuse me small-child. Can you please give me revenue estimates for the last 4 quarters of lemonade sales?
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I also need the number of hours you worked
and the cost of the supplies and equipment. OK?
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Also, it鈥檚 not like tax evaders and rare-animal
smugglers and cocaine dealers are going to
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want to give a completely honest accounting
of their finances.
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But economists are a diligent bunch, so they鈥檝e
also come up with indirect macroeconomic ways
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to try to wrap their head around the informal
economy. Let鈥檚 go to the Thought Bubble.
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One way economists try to estimate the size
of the hidden economy is by looking at the
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difference between the total income a country
reports and its total expenditures.
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If there wasn鈥檛 an underground economy,
you鈥檇 expect the two to be pretty equal.
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But, if people are spending a whole lot more
than they鈥檙e legally making or borrowing,
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that money has to be coming from somewhere.
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So, the difference between the two might help indicate the size of the informal economy in a given country.
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Economists also look at the demand for cash
since many of the transactions that take place
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in the underground economy take place in cash.
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It鈥檚 not like most street vendors are set
up to take Apple Pay.
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And you probably don鈥檛 want to write a check
for an endangered salamander or something.
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A greater demand for cash in an economy might
signal a larger underground economy.
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Another way economists attempt to measure the size of the informal economy is by studying electricity use.
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It turns electricity is a good indicator of
total economic activity.
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I guess everyone from off-the-books dishwashers
to drug dealers need energy.
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So, if electricity use is high and the GDP
is relatively low, economists estimate the
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underground economy is doing pretty well.
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Thanks Thought Bubble. So just how big do
economists think the informal economy is?
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Huge. Huge-huge. Trillions of dollars globally.
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The underground economy is less active in
developed countries,
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where economists estimate it is between 10 and 20 percent of total GDP. But that鈥檚 still a lot of money.
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In the U.S. the underground economy is probably
worth somewhere between 1 and 2 trillion dollars.
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And in developing countries, the underground economy often accounts for more than 1/3 of economic output.
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The International Labor Organization says the informal economy also employs half to three quarters
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of all non-farm employees in developing countries.
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In India, for example, as many as 90% of workers have jobs of the books. Out of reach of the government.
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And there have even been places where the
ENTIRE economy was informal. Seriously.
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Look up the Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong.
It was amazing. Bad, yes, but amazing.
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A lot of work in the informal economy is
focused on selling or doing everyday things --
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just out of sight of the government.
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But we should take a minute to talk about
the illegal trade that goes on around the world.
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According to the UN, organized crime is an
870-billion dollar a year business.
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About 1.5% of global GDP. Drug trafficking is
the biggest chunk of that -- about $320 billion.
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Counterfeiting earns about $250 billion a
year for criminal groups.
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There鈥檚 also billions getting made from human
trafficking -- smuggling people across borders.
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Exploiting the environment is profitable, too.
Timber trafficking is a $3.5 billion business.
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Smugglers also kill and sell ivory from elephants,
horn from rhinos, bones from tigers.
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The E.U. recently asked member countries to do
a better job counting vice in their GDP totals.
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According to the New York Times, statisticians
in Spain tried to pinpoint the average price
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of a room at a Spanish brothel, and what
Spanish prostitutes charged per session.
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Britain has also tried to put numbers on its sex and drug trade -- its office of National Statistics thinks prostitution
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and drug sales added about 10 billion pounds
-- that's $17 billion -- to the country鈥檚 GDP in 2009.
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Because illegal markets are by-their-nature illegal,
they can often be dangerous places to buy or sell.
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Take the market for human kidneys.
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Kidney sellers often get less for their
kidney than they agreed to before a surgery.
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They might not get the medical care they were
promised.
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People on the receiving end of the kidney sometimes wind up with diseased or non-matching organs.
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And there鈥檚 not much you can do if you illegally
buy a lousy kidney.
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So some ethicists and economists argue the
market for kidneys should be legalized.
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They say it鈥檚 better to allow the government
to set some ground rules in a market that,
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it seems, is going to exist with or without
regulation.
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Allowing people to sell their kidneys could
also help solve the supply problem --
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keeping thousands of people who need
new kidneys from dying each year.
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But, making the kidney market legal, moving
it into the official economy, has it鈥檚 own risks.
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In Iran, where it鈥檚 actually legal to sell
kidneys, the sellers are typically poor.
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Do we really want poor people selling organs
to help provide for their families?
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Do we want situations where people might be
coerced into selling a kidney for money?
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Let鈥檚 go back to the broader informal economy.
You might be thinking to yourself,
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"OK Adriene, I get that unscrupulous organ traffickers should be put out of business."
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"And I鈥檓 against protected rain forests
getting chopped down as much as the next person."
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"But what鈥檚 wrong with people doing LEGAL
jobs, just working off the books?"
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And It鈥檚 a fair question.
It depends on who you ask.
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Groups like the International Labor Organization point out that all that work in the informal economy
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don鈥檛 have the same sort of safety-net place
as people who work in regulated jobs.
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They might not get sick time or health insurance.
They might not get paid overtime -- or get paid at all.
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They may not get to work with the safety precautions
in place that the government would require.
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And while it鈥檚 not always true, informal employment often means poor working conditions and increasing poverty.
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The people who take this work are often women and migrant laborers, or people who don鈥檛 have access to better jobs.
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Economists also point out that a big informal
economy makes it difficult for the government
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to get an accurate count of those important economic statistics like unemployment and income.
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And that might encourage misguided policies.
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But, the underground economy CAN offer jobs
and work where they don鈥檛 otherwise exist.
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Researchers estimate the size of the informal economy in the U.S. doubled during the financial crisis.
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People who were laid off from their jobs,
with no prospects for formal employment,
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picked up odd-jobs to piece together a living.
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And they turned around and spent some of that money in the formal economy. Places like the grocery store.
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The informal economy can serve as a temporary buffer for individuals -- and the economy as a whole.
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But economists worry the growth of the underground
economy can set off a negative cycle --
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basically as people drop out of the official economy, and stop paying taxes, tax revenue falls.
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Governments are then faced with
a couple of choices.
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They can respond with cuts in spending on things like social safety nets, or they can increase taxes.
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But that creates a vicious cycle, pushing more people into under the table jobs. And on. And on.
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So, the informal economy is complicated.
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Governments can try to fight it, they can
try to integrate it, but they can鈥檛 ignore it.
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Thanks for watching, we鈥檒l see you next
week.
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