Informal Sector and Labour RightsGEFONTGeneral 非正规部门和劳动权利gefont 一般.doc
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1、Informal Sector and Labour Rightsby Bishnu Rimal 1. IntroductionThere is no universal definition of Informal Sector. Generally, we only discuss on more visible segments of economic activities as informal sector. However, there is a limitless boundary of informal sector. Moreover, it is a hidden segm
2、ent of economic activity with a vast number of labour force.Many authors have often defamed informal sector in negative sense. According to them, those are informal labourers who are not in formal sector, not protected by any labour law, not in formal employee-employer relationship and not getting a
3、ny benefits entitled to them as employee. Besides, they are hardly recognized as a labourers and not included in the economic statistics.According to Asian Labour Update, a publication of Hong Kong based regional labour NGO- the Asia Monitor Resource Centre (AMRC), informal labourers are those worke
4、rs whose method of work is usually through the sale of their labour on a daily or piece rate basis or through self -employment as small producers, vendors or service providers.The informal sector is not disassociated from the formal sector. There exists a certain type of interdependence through back
5、ward or forward production linkages with formal enterprises through contract of labour or services. It is obvious that the definition of informal sector is descriptive one rather than analytical. Some have even used the word unorganized as synonym of informal. One of the Indian writers Sarath Davala
6、 has stated that it is really difficult to define the term informal. He argues that the word unprotected would be more suitable to define this sector rather than as informal or unorganized.An Indian organization SEWA (Self Employed Womens Association) defines the word informal in its report of the N
7、ational Commission on Self -employed Women and informal sector based on the nature of the work they perform. Who are the women labourers in the informal sector? The report includes: those doing manual work like agriculture, construction work and other sectors. home based producers including artisans
8、 and piece rate work those engaged in processing of traditional and non-traditional areas service providers like garbage pickers and domestic helpers petty vendors and hawkers all other poor labouring women in the unprotected sector.An International Labour Organisation (ILO) report has mentioned tha
9、t “low cost, easy entry and exit. labour intensive with low technical input, small scale and its unorganised nature” are the characteristics of the informal sector.The Labour Law- 1990 has mentioned informal labourers as those who are working in any establishment in less than Tell person in number w
10、ith the word out of enterprise. Likewise, the Trade Union Act- 1992 has mentioned the Trade Union Association registered under its article 4(2) as an association of workers working “out of enterprises”. Though, our Labour Act has not used word informal, but in our reality, it indicates those establi
11、shments which employ less than ten people as informal sector. It would be fair if we explained those poor who are out of planned economy as the labour force of informal sector. Though it is sometimes defined as “individual economy”, “unstructured”, “unenumerated”, “low -income segments” etc., expert
12、s describes it is not an individual but a collection of economic activities.2. Informal Sector in NepalAs in other developed and developing world, Nepals informal sector also has been divided into two major parts. They are: Rural Informal Sector and the Urban Informal Sector.According to a report- T
13、he Rural Informal Sector in Asia: Policies and Strategies, published by International Labour Office, Geneva, the term rural is defied to include all places with population under 50,000 where agriculture is the dominant activity accounting for bulk of the income and employment. Such rural informal se
14、ctor includes both the agricultural and non- agricultural segments.Among the Nepals informal sector, agriculture is the single largest sector. In agriculture, there are three main divisions. The worker who works on yearly wage or cultivates a small piece of land as a tenant or somehow self-employed
15、agricultural worker comes under the first category. Mainly wage labourers in agriculture, who perform their work in daily wage or monthly or yearly basis fall within second category. The word Hali (those who plough the land), Gothala (the cattle herders) and Khetala (daily wage labourers) denote suc
16、h workers in this connection. The forced labour and the bonded agricultural labourers are in the third category of agri-informal workers. The Kamaiyas of western Nepal are the living example in this regard.According to the Concept-paper of the Ninth Plan, Nepals underemployment rate is 40 per cent o
17、f the total labour force (estimated 8.779 Million by the end of Eight Plan). Major portion of this vast under employed labour force has been absorbed by the rural agricultural sector. They are extremely poor.Nepal: An Employment strategy, the report prepared by UN ACC Task Force for ILO has mentione
18、d that 92 per cent of total labour force is in rural area. And it is obvious that the largest percentage of this number is informal. Out of this number, about 81 per cent is active only in agriculture. Besides peasant and the non-wage agricultural worker, there are two categories of agricultural wag
19、e labourers.First covers those wage- labourer whose means of survival is only his wage; whereas second category covers those whose means of livelihood is the wage and their self employment. It is estimated that there are 20 Million wage labourers in Nepalese agricultural sector, where 500,000 famili
20、es are landless. These families cover 1 million workers. Of the total labour force 8.779 millions, only 7-10 per cent are in formal segments. Thus, it indicates that the remaining number of total labour force is in informal sector.Table 1: No. of household using family members and using wage labour
21、(in percentage)TypeNo. of farmHouseholdHousehold using onlyfamily membersHousehold using only daily wage labourHousehold using only permanent and dailywage labourHousehold using only permanent labour4+5 Average No. of permanent labourMountain260,71270.027.91.11.12.21.9Hills 1,357,72069.527.71.81.02.
22、82.2Terai1,117,81856.934.17.02.19.12.1Nepal2,736,05064.430.33.91.45.32.1Non-agricultural rural informal sector includes various establishment of traditional and non-traditional cottage industries. As stated in FNCCIs publication - Nepal and the World, A Statistical Profile 1997, the traditional cott
23、age industries in Nepal are: hand loom, pedal loom, semi-automatic loom, wrapping, dyeing, printing, sewing, knitting, local carpet, woollen carpet, pasmina, woollen garment, carpentry, wooden handicraft, bamboo and cane goods, materials made from natural fibers, hand made paper, gold, silver, brass
24、, copper work and ornaments, image making, precious and semi-precious stones, honey, big cardamom processing, pottery, leather cutting, drying and village tanning and leather works, jute, babio choya and goods from cotton thread, leather goods, artistic goods from bones and horns, stone carving. sto
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