Macharia Kamau
There are more Kenyan women than men in employment.
According to the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) census data
released yesterday, the...
number of employed women as at August last year
outnumbered that of men.
The report noted that there are 9.89 million working women, which is about 100,000 more than the 9.79 million men employed.
This translated to women accounting for 50.2 per cent of the working
population and would burst the myth that men are the sole bread winners
in the country.
SEE ALSO :Kenya’s biggest ethnic communities listed
The
numbers of women in employment increase among people in rural Kenya,
where there are 600,000 more women than men that are engaged in economic
activities.
The numbers also reveal that about half of the Kenyan population is
outside the workforce, with KNBS putting the number of people looking
for work or who cannot find work at 2.62 million, while another 18.93
million are classified as being outside the workforce – and include
housewives, the retired, incapacitated and the too young to work.
“The results show that the economically active population was 22.3
million, comprising the working (19.7 million) and those seeking work
(2.6 million). Females accounted for 50.2 per cent of the total working
population,” reads the KNBS report.
“18.9 million individuals were outside the labour force during the
reference period. There were 10.1 million youth aged 18-34 and 4.1
million youth aged 15-24 in the labour force.” “Persons outside
employment is what was referred to as the economically inactive and
includes full time students, home makers, the retired, incapacitated
persons and those who are either too young or too wold to work.”
It is in the rural areas where the number of women in labour force is
glaringly larger than of men. A total of 7.23 women reported to have
been working, against 6.63 million men.
SEE ALSO :2019 census results: Tyranny of big tribes
A
total of 13.8 million people in rural Kenya were in some form of
employment, while an almost similar number, 13.29 million, were outside
labour. A further 1.28 million are looking for work.
The numbers appear to give credence to claims that women are burdened
with the more difficult but less rewarding jobs of running smallholder
farms across rural Kenya, while the men in the countryside do little but
mill around the trading centres.
They also show there are more men in high paying jobs than women.
In urban areas, however, there are more men in labour force than women.
Data shows that of the 5.8 million that were in employment across
different urban areas in Kenya, 3.16 million (54.4 per cent) were men
while 2.64 million (45.6 per cent) were women.
The major towns in Kenya report a total population of 12.78 million,
with more than half the men living there reporting to have been engaged
in some kind of employment. “The proportion of males in the urban areas
that reported having worked was 50.4 per cent compared to 40.6 per cent
of females,” says the report.
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