1st Edition

The Informal Sector in Ecuador Artisans, Entrepreneurs and Precarious Family Firms

By Alan Middleton Copyright 2020
    308 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    306 Pages 20 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book looks back over the last forty years of change and development in Ecuador, showing how macro level changes have impacted families and workplaces on the local level. Traditionally a dependent economy reliant on agricultural exports, the impact of neoliberalism and new sources of income from oil have transformed the informal and artisanal sectors in Ecuador. Exploring these dynamics using a combination of micro and macro analyses, this book demonstrates how the social relations of the sector are connected to the wider social, economic and political systems in which they operate.



    The book dives into the links between micro-production and the wider economy, including the relationships between different types of artisanal enterprises and their customers, their connections to the private sector and the state, the importance of social networks and social capital and the relevance of finance capital in microenterprise development. Overall, the analysis investigates how artisans, entrepreneurs and family-based enterprises seek to protect their interests when faced with neoliberal policies and the impacts of globalisation.



    This remarkable longitudinal study will be of considerable interest to researchers of development studies, economics, sociology, anthropology, geography and Latin American Studies.

    1. Artisans and the informal sector in Ecuador  2. Informals, entrepreneurs and artisans  3. Artisans in Quito, 1975-2015  4. Neoliberalism in Ecuador  5. Choosing informality  6. Formal-informal relations: backward linkages  7. Customers, clients and formal markets  8. Family firms, homeworkers and home-based enterprises  9. Social networks and the theft of social capital  10. Artisans and the state  11. Microfinance and micro-firm development in context  12. Artisan perspectives on bank credit  13. Main issues and future prospects  14. Conclusions: theory, ideology and evidence

    Biography

    Alan Middleton is Emeritus Professor of Urban Studies at Birmingham City University, UK, Leverhulme Emeritus Fellow, and Chief Executive Officer of the Governance Foundation.