Study
| EST. READ TIME 2 MIN.The Underground Economy: Global Evidence of Its Size and Impact
As a natural extension of its interest in the ways in which the private sector reacts to the activities of government, The Fraser Institute has long studied the underground economy. In pursuing this research, the Institute assembled a roster of experts in Vancouver in April 1994. They included government officials, accountants, economists, lawyers, federal police, politicians, and public policy analysts from Canada, the United States, Britain, Mexico, Chile, Peru, Russia, and Hong Kong.
The papers prepared for this meeting, as subsequently revised by the authors, constitute a unique collection of information about the underground economy and how it is manifested in a variety of countries. The purpose of this book is to collect these research findings to make them available to those who are interested in how this fascinating and increasingly prevalent segment of economic activity operates.
Section One collects papers that deal particularly with the underground economy in Canada. Section Two outlines a perspective of the UGE which is not often encountered, specifically, the view of law enforcement officials. Section Three contains seven papers that analyze the underground economy in different countries and from different perspectives. Those who have an interest in the underground economy will be impressed by the diversity of experience in the countries discussed-from the United States and Britain to Mexico, Peru, and Chile, through to Russia and China. The fourth and final section of the book consists of two papers by two eminent Canadian economists-Jonathan R. Kesselman and Francois Vaillancourt. The focus, once again, the Canadian economy and some policy implications of the UGE.
Share
-
Owen Lippert
Owen Lippert is a former Senior Fellow and former Director of the Law and Markets Project at the Fraser Institute.He writes and researches on intellectual property, aboriginal, legal and trade issues. Previously, he served as a policy advisor to the federal Minister of Science, the Attorney General of Canada and to the Premier of British Columbia. He holds a Ph.D. in European History from the University of Notre Dame, Indiana and a B.A. from Carleton College, Minnesota. He has most recently edited and contributed to Competitive Strategies for Intellectual Property Protection (Fraser Institute, February 2000). His articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal , National Post , Globe and Mail and many regional papers in Canada and the United States. He writes the Law and Economics column for Canadian Lawyer magazine.… Read more Read Less…
Related Topics
Related Articles
By: Livio Di Matteo
By: Gary Mauser