 What we have found from many years of experience with many organizations of informal workers around the world is that there are four requirements to changing the policy regulatory environment in support of informal workers. One is that the workers need voice. They need collective voice. They need voice that's armed with the data and the research policy analysis that helps them advocate effectively. A second is they need to be visible. They need visibility in policymaking circles. This requires better measurement of their work and their activities. It requires better policy analysis so that they're visible to the policymakers. A third enabling condition is validity. They need to be recognized as valuable contributors to the economy. And if you have voice, visibility, validity, this goes a long way to helping change the mindset of the policymakers who subscribe to those negative dominant narratives about the informal economy and help them to envision a new way to respond to informality.