Jua kali artisans at work in Nairobi. Kenya’s informal sector employed
11.8 million people in 2014 against 2.4 million in the formal sector.
PHOTO | FILE
NATION MEDIA GROUP
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The study looked at the informal employment outside the agricultural sector with the overall focus being industrialisation through trade.
- Employment in the sector stands at 77.9 per cent of the total ahead of Rwanda’s 73.4 per cent, Uganda’s 59.2 and Tanzania’s 8.5 per cent.
- The study attributes the high level of informal sector workers to inability of the formal sector to absorb the huge number of job seekers.
Kenya has the highest informal sector employment
among nine countries covered in a new report by the United Nations’
Economic Commission for Africa.
Employment in the sector stands at 77.9 per cent of the
total ahead of Rwanda’s 73.4 per cent, Uganda’s 59.2 and Tanzania’s 8.5
per cent. In Egypt, Liberia, Madagascar, Mauritius and South Africa, the
sector offers jobs to 51.2, 49.5, 51.8, 9.3 and 17.8 per cent of
workers, respectively.
The study, launched Thursday in Nairobi, looked at
the informal employment outside the agricultural sector with the overall
focus being industrialisation through trade.
“In Kenya and Rwanda, three out of four workers are
employed in the informal sector, a proportion that increases to over 80
per cent among women,” said the report.
The study attributes the high level of informal
sector workers to inability of the formal sector to absorb the huge
number of job seekers.
“As the formal sector — public and private — cannot
absorb the increased tide of job seekers, informal employment usually
drives job creation in most countries,” says the report. It notes that
over 70 per cent of jobs in eastern, central, western and southern
Africa in the past 10 years have been in the informal sector.
In Africa, abundant labour supply is compounded by
the fact that there are no social safety nets, making it difficult for
most low-skilled workers to quit the labour market.
The coverage of social protection of informal
workers in Africa is estimated at about 10 per cent compared to 50 per
cent in Latin America and the Caribbean.
“Most of these workers operate under a high degree
of informality and vulnerability, resulting in small and unpredictable
incomes, poor working conditions and low productivity. Such informality
is likely to trap people into poverty,” says the report.
According to data from Kenya’s Economic Survey
2015, the informal sector employed 11.8 million people in 2014 against
2.4 million in the modern or formal sector.
Total recorded employment stands at 14.3 million.
Out of the 799,700 jobs created last year, 693,400 were in the informal
sector.
The number of new formal sector jobs fell in 2014 to 106,400 from 134,200 in the previous year.
“Majority of the small businesses such as
retailers, hawkers, boda boda operators and other service providers fall
in this sector but (it) excludes drug trafficking and any other illegal
activity,” said the Economic Survey.
The survey further noted that the sector had
expanded over the years to include people engaged in small-scale
manufacturing, transport, information, communication and technology.
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