Conclusions and recommendations
Contrary to many predictions, the informal sector is not
diminishing. It is increasing everywhere. Globalization and the associated search for
lower labour costs is one significant factor in this. Privatization and the contracting
out of services and activities are others. Contrary to some views the informal sector is,
by and large, neither innovative nor full of opportunity. Working conditions in the sector
are oppressive and dangerous. Thousands of children, often as young as 4 years old, work
in this sector; most incomes are well below the poverty line; workers usually do not have
access to state-provided social protection, training, and social services; exploitation
and infringement of workers' rights are common. The vast majority of people do not work in
the informal sector by choice and it is certainly not for them a stepping stone to
improvement. Rather it represents a means of survival.
There is a high proportion of women workers in the sector.
In general, the working conditions for men and women are different, for example in terms
of hours and type of work and also remuneration. Due to economic, social and cultural
factors women are particularly vulnerable among the working poor of the sector. The
informal sector is heterogenous in terms of activities and occupations, and its features
vary considerably from region to region and from country to country. Participants
discussed at length the difficulties in precisely defining the informal sector. They
agreed on the necessity to avoid using this concept as a catch-all term. Moreover, it was
agreed that the informal sector should refer to informal work or informal employment, and
not only to informal enterprises.
Three main segments were identified in the informal sector
workforce. The first segment corresponds to the owners or employers of micro-enterprises
including farmers who may employ a few workers and/or apprentices. They do not generally
constitute a target group for trade union organizing activities but may benefit from trade
union lobbying of governments and international organizations. The second segment
comprises own-account workers, which is comprised of the nominally self-employed and
street vendors and small farmers. It is the largest and most visible segment in the
informal sector. Despite being nominally self-employed many workers in this segment are
economically dependent on a single enterprise or a middleman for their survival. The third
segment encompasses employees engaged in full-time or casual employment. It includes wage
labourers working in micro-enterprises on a regular, casual or contract basis, unpaid
workers, including family members and apprentices, homeworkers and paid domestic workers.
The workforce in this segment is often physically hidden and therefore more difficult to
locate, contact and organize.
Participants recognized that this classification did not
fully convey the complexity of the sector but it provided a basis for the further
development of policies. It was decided that trade union recruitment efforts should focus
on both the second and third segments mentioned above.
1. Recommendations
for trade unions
2. Recommendations for governments and international organizations
3. Recommendations for follow-up activities by the Bureau for Workers'
Activities