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While 'off the books' consumption is not exceptional in the United
States, it is much more common and nearly universal along the
U.S-Mexico border. Within the border zone of South Texas,
consumption informality is in fact a way of life where 98.9% of
South Texans surveyed have consumed informal or underground
products. For example, households may employ services such as a
coyote (human smuggler), a nanny, or a computer technician to
clandestinely bring a family member or valued worker across the
border, provide care for children, or repair a home computer,
respectively, in transactions that go unrecorded and, more often
than not, undetected by the government.
Using original qualitative ethnographic field interviews and quantitative field survey results, Consumption, Informal Markets, and the Underground Economy explores the rationale for and model of 'off the books' consumption in a borderlands environment.
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