Title: Employment and gender differences in the informal economy
1Employment and gender differences in the
informal economy
- Valentina Stoevska (stoevska_at_ilo.org)
- Department of Statistics
- International Labour Office- Geneva
-
2 Overview
- Limitations of the current MDG Indicator 3.2
- Growth of the employment in informal sector (IS)/
informal employment (IE) - Statistical definitions of the employment in
informal sector and informal employment - Some findings re employment in informal economy
- References
3Limitations of the current MDG Indicator 3.2
- non-agricultural wage employment represents only
a small portion of total employment, - contribution of women to the national economy
underestimated and misrepresented - difficult to interpret,
- does not reveal that there are different types of
non-agricultural wage employment
4Additional indicators
- Employment by sector (agriculture, industry ,
services), - Wage employment in agriculture,
- Employment by status in employment (employees,
employers, contributing family members, etc.), - Employment in managerial occupations,
- Employment in the informal economy,
- ...
- More comprehensive picture of the women
situation in the labour market, and changes
5Reasons to monitor informal employment/
employment in the informal sector
- Growth of the informal economy
- Employment creation, income generation and
poverty eradication but workers lack legal and
social protection. - Informalisation of employment is partly
attributable to globalisation process
competitive pressure on enterprises leads to
mixed-mode labour arrangements (non-standards,
atypical, irregular, precarious) - Exists everywhere (incl. industrialised
countries), and in the formal sector - Relevance and meaning varies by country
6Informal sector Motives for participation
- Survival strategy lack of other jobs, obstacles
to employment in the formal sector, need to
supplement family income - Independence,
- Flexible work arrangements,
- Profitable income-earning opportunity,
- Non-compliance
- Regulations, tax payments, social security
contributions - ? reduced production costs
7ICLS Conceptual framework Employment in the
informal economy
- Employment in the IS and informal employment
refer to different aspects of the
informalisation of employment - Employment in IS employment in informal
enterprises. -defined in terms of
characteristics of production units/enterprises
(enterprise based) - Informal employment employment in informal jobs.
- - defined in terms of characteristics of persons
or their jobs (job based) - Employment in the informal economy defined as the
sum of jobs in the informal sector and of
informal jobs outside the informal sector.
8Conceptual frameworkEmployment in the informal
economy
Production units Informal jobs Formal jobs
Informal sector enterprises A B
Other units of production C D
Employment in the informal sector A
B Informal employment A C Informal
employment outside the informal
sector C Employment in the informal economy A
B C
9Definition of IS enterprises (15th ICLS)
- Private unincorporated enterprises,
- Not constituted as separate legal entities,
- No complete accounts available,
- At least some goods or services produced are
meant for sale or barter, - Enterprise size below low threshold,
- Enterprise not registered under specific forms of
national legislation at national level, - Engaged in non-agricultural activities.
10Definition of Informal Employment (17th ICLS)
- Total number of informal jobs carried out
- in formal sector enterprises or
- in informal sector enterprises or
- in households
- during a given reference period.
- Employees are considered to have informal jobs if
not covered by social security system or not
entitled to other employment benefits such as
paid annual or sick leave.
11Components Informal employment outside informal
sector
- Employees
- In informal jobs in formal sector enterprises,
- Paid domestic workers employed by households.
- Contributing family workers
- Working in formal sector enterprises.
- Own-account workers
- Engaged in goods production exclusively for final
use by own household (if employed according to
13th ICLS employment definition).
12Some findings re employment in informal economy
(based on national LFS data that are processed
by using international definitions of informal
employment/informal sector)
13(No Transcript)
14Source ILO, Department of Statistics
15Informal employment in and outside IS, as of
non-agricultural employment
Source ILO, Department of Statistics
16Source ILO, Department of Statistics
Share of informal employment in total
non-agricultural employment declines as the
level of development rises.
17Employment in the informal economy Gender
differences
Informal employment in non-agricultural
activities by sex for selected countries,
Women are more likely than men to have informal
jobs, suggesting that women turn to the informal
jobs more often than men because they lack
opportunities or they face other obstacles to
formal employment.
18Employment in the informal economy Gender
differences
Informal employment outside informal sector, in
non-agricultural activities, by sex for selected
countries,
Women are more likely than men to have informal
jobs outside the informal sector.
19Employment in the informal economy Gender
differences
Employment in informal sector, non-agricultural
activities, by sex for selected countries,
Women are less likely than men to have jobs in
informal sector enterprises. Men outnumber women
in informal sector enterprises.
20Need for further disaggregation e.g. by
geographic region (urban/rural)
21References
- Resolution concerning statistics of employment in
the informal sector (adopted by the Fifteenth
International Conference of Labour
Statisticians,1993) - Guidelines concerning a statistical definition of
informal employment (adopted by the Seventeenth
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
2003) - http//www.ilo.org/global/statistics-and-database
s/standards-and-guidelines/lang--en/index.htm - LABORSTA, an International Labour Office database
on labour statistics operated by the ILO
Department of Statistics http//laborsta.ilo.org