TY - JOUR
T1 - Interest group structure and organization in kenya's informal sector
T2 - Cultural Despair or a Politics of Multiple Allegiances?
AU - Widner, Jennifer
PY - 1991/4
Y1 - 1991/4
N2 - Much of the academic and policy discourse on the African informal sector assumes that the people who populate the informal economy have a distinct set of economic and political interests. The sector's participants are supposed to support policies different from those advocated by governments that seek to tax informal enterprises, by smallholders who seek higher prices for the crops they grow and thereby contribute to rising food prices, and by modern sector manufacturing that sells inputs used by informal enterprises for high prices and buys goods and services at low prices. This research suggests that patterns of interest group formation vary according to the extent to which entrepreneurs diversify their income portfolios and according to the perception of mobility within and between sectors. It uses this understanding to explain differences in patterns of interest formation between entrepreneurs in capital cities and in secondary towns. It offers data from a survey administered in three Kenyan secondary towns.
AB - Much of the academic and policy discourse on the African informal sector assumes that the people who populate the informal economy have a distinct set of economic and political interests. The sector's participants are supposed to support policies different from those advocated by governments that seek to tax informal enterprises, by smallholders who seek higher prices for the crops they grow and thereby contribute to rising food prices, and by modern sector manufacturing that sells inputs used by informal enterprises for high prices and buys goods and services at low prices. This research suggests that patterns of interest group formation vary according to the extent to which entrepreneurs diversify their income portfolios and according to the perception of mobility within and between sectors. It uses this understanding to explain differences in patterns of interest formation between entrepreneurs in capital cities and in secondary towns. It offers data from a survey administered in three Kenyan secondary towns.
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U2 - 10.1177/0010414091024001002
DO - 10.1177/0010414091024001002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84928440617
SN - 0010-4140
VL - 24
SP - 31
EP - 55
JO - Comparative Political Studies
JF - Comparative Political Studies
IS - 1
ER -