Global Economic Crisis Study
No Cushion to Fall Back on: The Global Economic Crisis and Informal Workers
Global Economic Crisis Fact Sheet
Below are findings from the first round of a year-long study on the impact of the global recession on the urban informal economy. Evidence was collected in ten countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America. In all, the study sample comprised 59 home-based workers, 52 street vendors, and 53 waste pickers. Those working in the informal economy have been hard hit by the crisis.
Informal workers’ incomes have declined, and they have no cushion of their own to help them manage through these difficult economic times.
The crisis is pushing informal workers and their families further into impoverishment.
Voices from the crisis: what informal workers are saying about the impact on their work and lives. Home-based workers are experiencing decreased demand for products, increased competition, and rising supply costs. “I used to get orders for slippers from Phuket and Sa Mui- about 600-800 pairs. Now I have no orders so I have to produce and sell by myself.” “About twenty women who were laid off from the factories, including a woman with a new born baby, came to ask me for some piece work, but I have no work to give them.” Waste pickers report a sharp decrease in the demand for recycled materials and in the market price for recycled goods as well as reduced supplies of recyclable materials. “Six months ago we used to fill four vehicles with material, now we fill barely one, or just a little more.” “If I got thirty thousand pesos before, now you have to kill yourself - wake up earlier, go to bed later, be on the streets for longer periods - to get thirty.” “When the work was good the children had all their vitamins - they had cereal and milk. Not anymore.” Street vendors report shrinking profit margins, increased competition, and decreased sales. “One is forced to sell at a loss, though you have walked the entire breadth and length of the town only to end at your house empty handed.” “Even spaces that were empty in town a year ago have been taken up by new entrants into hawking.” “I have grandchildren that I look after as my children have passed away. But I am unable to provide for them. I cannot sleep at night worried about money and how I was going to provide for them.” Download the pdf: GEC Study Fact Sheet (pdf 515 KB) Return to the GEC Study main page |

How the Global Economic Crisis Affected Informal Workers Between January and June 2009.