Institutional Reform and the Transition from Informality to Formal Enterprise Development
Abstract
Informality remains one of the most persistent structural features of developing economies, with millions of enterprises operating outside the boundaries of formal regulatory and legal systems. This paper examines how institutional reform shapes the conditions under which informal enterprises make the transition toward formality. Drawing on institutional economics, particularly the frameworks developed by North (1990) and Williamson (2000), it argues that the decision to formalize is not simply a rational cost-benefit calculation. It is deeply embedded in the quality of a country's institutional environment. The paper reviews evidence on how regulatory burdens, property rights protection, and access to formal finance function together to either push enterprises toward formality or keep them locked in informality. It also examines how enforcement capacity and government credibility mediate reform outcomes. The paper concludes that sustainable formalization requires a coherent, sequenced institutional approach, rather than isolated deregulation or registration simplification.
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