Underground economy
Encyclopedia : U : UN : UND : Underground economy
| Economies | ||
| Sectors and Systems | ||
| Closed economy | ||
| Dual economy | ||
| Gift economy | ||
| Informal economy | ||
| Market economy | ||
| Mixed economy | ||
| Open economy | ||
| Participatory economy | ||
| Planned economy | ||
| Underground economy | ||
| Real-World Examples and Models | ||
| Anglo-Saxon economy | ||
| American School | ||
| Global economy | ||
| Hunter-gatherer economy | ||
| Information economy | ||
| New industrial economy | ||
| Palace economy | ||
| Plantation economy | ||
| Social market economy | ||
| Transition economy | ||
| Ideologies and Theories | ||
| Capitalist economy | ||
| Corporate economy | ||
| Natural economy | ||
| Socialist economy | ||
| Token economy | ||
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Some estimates of the size of the underground economy in the U.S. alone range to up to $1 trillion.
Measurement of the size of the underground economy is subject to a large margin of error. Economists seeking to measure its size have often looked at the volume of cash in circulation, although a large part of the underground economy takes place via bank accounts located in tax havens. Discrepancies between the growth of officially reported spending (GDP) and the growth of cash in circulation may be used to infer growth in the size of the underground economy, but these estimates are subject to a considerable amount of judgement, and are controversial.
The growth of online commerce may have increased the size of the undeground economy. eBay has over 40 million regular users, including international users. The sellers are legally responsible to pay taxes[Going Underground: America's Shadow Economy], FrontPage magazine, January 2005. However, there is no report on how many actually do, and government rarely if ever intervenes to ensure that they do.
The underground economy, when trading decisions are not the result of coercion, is arguably a free market, since, by definition, it lacks government intervention. However, various governments have engaged themselves in the underground economy, thus blurring the line between public intervention and its absence. Furthermore, underground economy may result in monopolies and oligopolies, which contradict the very notion of "free market". Thus, the mafia usually enjoy an important control over individuals.
Further reading
- [Official March 2000 French Parliamentary Report on the obstacles on the control and repression of financial criminal activity and of money-laundering in Europe] by French MPs Vincent Peillon and Arnaud Montebourg, third section on "Luxembourg's political dependency toward the financial sector: the Clearstream affair" (pp.83-111 on PDF version)
- [The Underground Economy from National Center for Policy Analysis] (1998)
- [Going Underground: America's Shadow Economy by Jim McTague] (2005)
- [War on Junk: Black-Market Satire]
- [undergroundeconomics.com: your source for hard-to-find economic statistics]
- [The Underground Economy: Global Evidence of Its Size and Impact] (1997)
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