Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Small businesses provide most jobs in under developed, developing nations: ILO

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More than two-third of total employment in under-developed and developing countries is provided by small economic units, the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on’s latest report has found.

Policy makers must treat these units as a central part of economic and social developmen­t strategies worldwide, added Small Matters, the report released on October 10, 2019. It argued that such an approach is a must for low- and middle-income countries where the majority is employed in small economic units.

Three of United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS) depend on employment opportunit­ies — eradicate poverty (SDG 1), full and productive employment and decent work for all (SDG 8) and reduce inequality (SDG 10). The ILO used data from 99 countries to conclude that there’s a negative correlatio­n between countries’ level of per capita GDP and employment share of the self-employed and micro and small enterprise­s.

This means that countries in lowest income level groups have almost 100 per cent self employment. “In these countries, hardly any employment occurs in firms with 50 or more employees,” read the report.

Self employment is the highest in South Asia (66 per cent) followed by sub-saharan Africa (50 per cent) and the Middle East and North Africa (44 per cent), found the report. “Around 85 per cent of workers in India are self-employed or do casual work and 73 percent of nonagricul­tural workers in Bangladesh were self-employed,” found the report.

Countries that have more people working in the service sector, have lower employment in the agricultur­e sector, according to the report. For example, Niger and Madagascar see agricultur­e provide 75 per cent employment and services only 15 per cent. On the other hand, in developed countries like Ireland, Netherland­s and Denmark, hardly five per cent of total employment is in the agricultur­e sector, while 80 per cent is provided by services.

In the agricultur­e sector too, most of employment opportunit­ies fall in the informal category. Around 95 per cent of agricultur­al sector employment in South Asia and subsaharan Africa is informal, according to the report.

But, the developed world is different. Europe and Central Asia have the largest share of agricultur­al employment in the formal sector, which is more than 30 per cent. In East Asia and the Pacific, it is more than 20 per cent, highlighte­d the report.

In sub-saharan Africa and South Asia, selfemploy­ment alone accounts for more than half of the total agricultur­e employment.

The report also underlines an inversely proportion­al relationsh­ip between countries’ economies and the nature of employment opportunit­ies.

The share of the self employed in lowincome countries is almost five times the share in high-income countries, it added. “Similarly, the employment share of microenter­prises (two-nine employees) is much higher in low- and lower-middle-income countries than in upper-middle- and highincome countries,” read the report.

But, the employment in small enterprise­s (10-49 employees) is more in high-income countries, it added. Employment share of small enterprise­s is just three per cent in low-income countries, while it goes up to 25 per cent in high-income countries. “The employment share of medium-sized and large enterprise­s increases with rising country income level,” according to the report.

The report argued that it is important to understand the nature of employment opportunit­ies available in a country to facilitate and improve the quality.

 ??  ?? Employment in small enterprise­s is more in high-income countries
Employment in small enterprise­s is more in high-income countries

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