Informality in the Western Balkans: a culture, a contextual rational choice, or both?

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Abstract

Using data compiled during extensive survey research carried out in the societies of the Western Balkans, we attempt to contribute to the discussion on whether informality, which in this region is largely present even in formal settings, is a consequence of a specific culture brought about by particular historical circumstances–several centuries of Ottoman rule, delayed modernization, and the legacy of socialism–or whether it is a manifestation of a contextualized rational choice, embodied as a response to the transitional environment in which citizens live. Trying to contribute to these deliberations and create a new basis for the better understanding of these ‘informal ways of getting things done’, we operationalize two sets of indicators that speak in favour of one or the other standpoint. We apply Multiple Correspondence Analysis and regression methods, but the complexity of the analysis produced results that defy simple oppositions. However, we identified perceptions of the level of informality, lack of trust in institutions and readiness to justify informality as the strongest predictors of informal practices, with a non-linear relationship between the age of respondents and their involvement in informal practices, and a rather weak correlation with indicators of their economic, social and cultural capital.

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Cvetičanin, P., Popovikj, M., & Jovanović, M. (2019). Informality in the Western Balkans: a culture, a contextual rational choice, or both? Journal of Southeast European and Black Sea, 19(4), 585–604. https://doi.org/10.1080/14683857.2019.1692427

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