The current productive restructuring in Central America
is creating significant changes in the region's labour
markets. New sectors of tradeables are
emerging which, from the point of view of labour, cannot be
characterised as
formal. Indeed, formal employment is currently in a state
of decline while the
informal sector is redefining its internal heterogeneity.
This article focuses on the
new expressions of informality. Three scenarios are
identified: the economy of
poverty, subcontracting, and the agglomeration of small
dynamic enterprises.
Various analytical aspects are considered in each of
these three scenarios: the
context of the globalisation process; the type of informality;
the resources which
are mobilised; the challenges faced; and the identities
generated. The analysis is
based on the evidence supplied by three case studies. The
first refers to the former
public employees of Managua (Nicaragua) who, in the
aftermath of state reforms,
presently pursue informal activities. The second example
concerns a group of
women in the community of Puente Alto (Honduras) who work
as subcontracted
producers for an industrial export firm. Sarchí,
Costa Rica's principal artisan
centre, illustrates the third scenario.