Chakraborty, PavelSingh, RahulSoundararajan, Vidhya2024-11-012024-11-012024-02-28World Bank Economic Review0258-6770https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42355Does higher import competition increase formalization and aggregate productivity Exploiting plausibly exogenous variation from Chinese imports, we provide empirical causal evidence that higher imports increase the share of formal manufacturing enterprise employment in India. This formal share increase is due to both the rise in formal-enterprise employment driven by high-productivity firms, and a fall in informal-enterprise employment. The labor reallocation is enabled by the formal firms’ hiring of contract workers, who do not carry stringent firing costs. Overall, Chinese import competition increased formal-sector employment share by 3.7 percentage points, and aggregate labor productivity by 2.87 percent, between the years 2000-2001 and 2005-2006.en-USCC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGOFORMAL-SECTOR EMPLOYMENTINFORMALITYCONTRACT WORKERSCHINESE IMPORTSREALLOCATIONImport Competition, Formalization, and the Role of Contract LaborJournal ArticleWorld Bank10.1596/42355