Major Occupational Groups
in the Informal Economy
Street vendors in Mexico City; push-cart vendors in
New York city; rickshaw pullers in Calcutta; jeepney drivers in
Manila; garbage collectors in Bogotá; and roadside barbers
in Durban. Those who work on the streets or in the open-air are
the more visible occupational groups in the informal economy. The
streets of cities, towns, and villages in most developing countries
– and in many developed countries - are l ined by barbers,
cobblers, garbage collectors, waste recyclers, and vendors of vegetables,
fruit, meat, fish, snack–foods, and a myriad of non–perishable
items ranging from locks and keys to soaps and detergents, to clothing.
In many countries, head–loaders, cart pullers, bicycle peddlers,
rickshaw pullers, and camel, bullock, or horse cart drivers jostle
to make their way down narrow village lanes or through the maze
of cars, trucks, vans, and buses on city streets.
But the informal economy includes activities and workers that are
less visible and, even, invisible. On the street corners of most
cities, towns, or villages, even in residential areas, are countless
small kiosks or stalls that sell goods of every conceivable kind.
Down the crowded lanes of most cities, towns, or villages are small
workshops that repair bicycles and motorcycles; recycle scrap metal;
make furniture and metal parts; tan leather and stitch shoes; weave,
dye, and print cloth; polish diamonds and other gems; make and embroider
garments; sort and sell cloth, paper, and metal waste; and more.
The least visible informal workers, the majority of them women,
sell or produce goods from their homes: garment makers; embroiderers;
incense–stick rollers; cigarette–rollers; paper bag
makers; kite makers; hair band makers; food processors; and others.
These least visible workers are not confined to developing countries.
Home-based workers are to be found around the world, including:
garment workers in Toronto; embroiderers on the island of Madeira;
shoemakers in Madrid; and assemblers of electronic parts in Leeds.
Some of these home-based workers work on their own account, while
others work on a piece-rate basis for a contractor or a firm.
For more information
on key occupations categorized by place of work, please click here.
Other categories of informal work that are common in both developed
and developing countries include contract workers in restaurants
and hotels; sub-contracted janitors and security guards; casual
day labourers in construction and agriculture; piece-rate workers
in sweatshops; and temporary office helpers or off-site data processors.
Most workers in all of these categories of work are informally employed,
without secure contracts, worker benefits, or social protection.
Conditions of work and the level of earnings differ markedly among
those who scavenge on the streets for rags and paper, those who
produce garments on a sub–contract from their homes, those
who sell goods on the streets, and those who work as temporary data
processors. Even within countries, the informal economy is highly
segmented by place of work, sector of the economy, and status of
employment and, across these segments, by social group and gender.
But most workers in the informal economy share one thing in common:
the lack of legal recognition and protection.
For case studies of major occupational groups, see below:
1. Street Vendors
ILO. 2002.
"Illustrative Case Studies: Street Vendors." In
Women
and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture. Geneva:
ILO.
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek,
Francie Lund, James Heintz with Christine Bonner and Renana Jhabvala.
2005. "Close
Up: Occupational Groups." In The
Progress of the World's Women: Women, Work and Poverty. New
York: UNIFEM.
Cohen, Monique with Mihir Bhatt and Pat
Horn.. 2000. Women
Street Vendors: The Road to Recognition." SEEDS,
No. 20.
2. Waste Collectors
For more information on waste collectors, please
visit the waste collectors page by clicking here.
Medina, Martin. 2005.
"Waste
Picker Cooperatives in Developing Countries."
Paper prepared for WIEGO/Cornell/SEWA Conference on Membership-Based
Organizations of the Poor, Ahmedabad, India, January 2005.
Medina, Martin. 2005.
"Waste
Picker Cooperatives in Developing Countries." Paper prepared
for WIEGO/Cornell/SEWA Conference on Membership-Based Organizations
of the Poor, Ahmedabad, India, January 2005.
Medina, Martin. 1997.
"Informal
Recycling and Collection of Solid Wastes in Developing Countries:
Issues and Opportunities."
Tokyo: United Nations
University / Institute of Advanced Studies Working Paper.
No. 24.
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek,
Francie Lund, James Heintz with Christine Bonner and Renana Jhabvala.
2005. "Close
Up: Occupational Groups." In The
Progress of the World's Women: Women, Work and Poverty. New
York: UNIFEM.
Chen, Martha with Nidhi Mirani and
Mita Parikh. 2006.
"Waste
Pickers." In Self-Employed
Women: A Profile of SEWA Membership. Ahmedabad: SEWA.
3. Home-based Producers
Chen, Martha Alter, Jennefer Sebstad and
Lesley O'Connell. 1999. "Counting
the Invisible Workforce: The Case of Homebased Workers."
World Development¸ Vol. 27, No. 3.
Jhabvala, Renana and Jane Tate. 1996.
"Out
of the Shadows: Homebased Workers Organize for International Recognition."
SEEDS, No. 18.
ILO. 2002.
"Illustrative
Case Studies: Home-based Workers." In Women
and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture. Geneva:
ILO.
4. Garment Makers
Lund , Francie and Jillian
Nicholson. 2003.
Chains
of Production, Ladders of Protection: Social Protection for Workers
in the Informal Economy. Durban:
School of Development Studies.
Human Rights Watch.
2006. Swept
Under the Rug: Abuses Against Domestic Workers Throughout the
World. Human Rights Watch. Vol. 17, No. 7C. New York:
Human Rights Watch.
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek,
Francie Lund, James Heintz with Christine Bonner and Renana Jhabvala.
2005. "Close
Up: Occupational Groups." In The
Progress of the World's Women: Women, Work and Poverty. New
York: UNIFEM.
Kabeer, Naila and Simeen Mahmud.
2004. "Rags, Riches and Women Workers: Export-oriented Garment
Manufacturing in Bangladesh." In Marilyn
Carr , ed., Chains
of Fortune: Linking Women Producers and Workers with Global Markets.
London: Commonwealth Secretariat.
5. Domestic Workers
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek,
Francie Lund, James Heintz with Christine Bonner and Renana Jhabvala.
2005. "Close
Up: Occupational Groups." In The
Progress of the World's Women: Women, Work and Poverty. New
York: UNIFEM.
Gothoskar, Sujata. 2005.
New
Initiatives in Organizing Strategy in the Informal Economy: Case
Study of Domestic Workers Organizing in India. Bangkok: Committee
for Asian Women.
Paper
- Appendicies
and References - Summary
Document
Mather, Celia. 2006.
"Out
of the Shadows." International Union Rights, Vol.
13, Issue 1.
6. Small Farmers
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek and Marilyn
Carr. 2004. "Illustrative
Case Studies: Agriculture." In Mainstreaming
Informal Employment and Gender in Poverty Reduction: A Handbook
for Policymakers and Other Stakeholders. London: Commonwealth
Secretariat.
7. Migrant Workers
Chen, Martha Alter, Joann Vanek and Marilyn
Carr. 2004. "Illustrative
Case Studies: International Migration." In Mainstreaming
Informal Employment and Gender in Poverty Reduction: A Handbook
for Policymakers and Other Stakeholders. London: Commonwealth
Secretariat.
In a 2006 publication called Self-Employed
Women: The Membership of SEWA, Marty Chen (WIEGO Coordinator/Harvard
University) included descriptions of several major categories of
informal workers among SEWA’s membership, as follows:
Urban Members:
- fruit and vegetable vendors
- garment makers
- bidi rollers
- construction workers
- waste pickers
Rural Members:
- embroiderers
- tobacco workers
- salt makers
- gum collectors
Each description summarizes the common constraints faced by the
respective category of worker and what SEWA has done to address
these constraints: to read these descriptions from Part III of this
book, please
click here.
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