Informal Economy Adds 6 Billion Pesos to the Country: Inegi
6 Articles
6 Articles
Recent data from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi) confirm that the informal economy in Mexico, at the end of 2024, grew 4.2% compared to 2023. “Mexico’s informal economy is integrated by the informal sector — which includes the totality of economic activities carried out by companies without legal personality owned by households — and other forms of informality — those in which workers working in formal economic units d…
Staff/RG The Measurements of Quarterly Informal Economy by Federal Entity (MEITEF) allow monitoring of the behavior of informal economic activities at both national and state levels. These measurements include the monitoring of Gross Added Value (VAB), disaggregated in the informal sector and in other forms of informality. In addition, they are complemented by information on jobs and their remunerations by sector of economic activity.
In the last quarter of 2024, the informal economy generated 6.1 trillion pesos, 4.2% more than the figures of 2023, according to figures of the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi).Through the indicator Measurements of the Informal Economy Quarterly by Federal Entity (MEITEF), the behavior of informal revenues in the country can be located both at the national and state levels. It may also interest you: OECD low estimated globa…
At the end of last year, the gross value added (VAB) of the informal economy amounted to 6.13 billion constant pesos, which meant an annual growth of 4.2%, according to the Measurements of the Quarterly Informal Economy by Federal Entity (MEITEF). Although this result represented the lowest increase in the last three quarters, also in that period there were variations of more than 4%, according to data of the MEITEF carried out by the National I…
In the Economic Analysis Bulletin No. 10 of the School of Business of the institution, an analysis is made of the informality in the country, which covers more than half of the employed population who do not have social security.The entry The informality of labor in Mexico permeates the formal sector: Iteso's bulletin was first published in CAMPUS MILENIO.
“We are a team committed to our land and we want to do our part so that new generations have a better place to live” – Juan Antonio Geraldo, Founder of REAM On the coasts of Baja California Sur, where the sea defines not only the landscape but also the lives of hundreds of communities, a new movement is gaining strength. Women are restoring forgotten objects to give them a second life; cooperatives are cultivating clams and oysters using regener…
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