Nepal

Socioeconomic indicators
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Demography |
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- - Total population (millions), 2002:24.6 (i)
- - Annual population growth rate (%), 2002/15:2 (i)
- - Population under age 15 (% of total), 2002:40.2 (i)
- - Urban population (% of total), 2002:14.6 (i)
- - Infant mortality rate (per 1,000 live births), 2002:66
(i)
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Education |
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- - Youth literacy rate (%, age 15-24), 2002:62.7 (i)
- - Female youth literacy rate (%, age 15-24),2002:46 (i)
- - Primary school enrolment ratio (gross), 1997/00: Male
128/Female108 (ii)
- - Secondary school enrolment ratio (gross), 1997/00: Male
58/ Female 43 (ii)
- - Net primary school attendance (%), 1992/02: Male 79/
Female 66 (ii)
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Economy |
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- - GDP/capita (PPP US$), 2002:1,370 (i)
- - Unemployment rate (% of labour force), 1999:1.1 (iii)
- - Population living below the national poverty line (%),
1990/01:42 (i)
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Source:
(i) Human Development Report 2004
(ii) UNICEF: The State of the World’s
Children 2004
(iii) World Development Indicators 2003
Child labour situation
Child labour remains a major economic and social phenomenon in
Nepal. According to the National Child Labour Survey undertaken
in 1997 ( 1 ), 1.660 million
children (26.6 per cent) out of the total 6.225 million children
aged between 5 and 14 years in the country are economically active
( 2 ).
- Among the 1.660 million economically active children, boys (54
per cent) outnumber girls (46 per cent) ( 3 );
- Many of these children do not go to schools (14.54 per cent
of the boys and 25.96 per cent of the girls) ( 4 );
- The large part (94.7 per cent, 1.576 million) of the economically
active children are engaged in the agriculture sector, mostly
as unpaid family workers and partly as forced labour attached
to their parents under debt bondage or similar other exploitative
labour. Besides agriculture, working children are mainly involved
in the services sector (27,000) and communications and transportation
sector (26,000) ( 5 );
- Based on several studies conducted under the IPEC Time-Bound
Programme (TBP) ( 6 ), it
is estimated that there are 127,143 children working in the worst
forms of child labour as bonded labourers, ragpickers,
porters, domestic workers, in mines, in the carpet sector, and
being trafficked. According to the same studies, the children
involved in these forms of child labour start working between
the ages of 10 and 14. In addition, more than one-third of them
are illiterate, and a majority are school dropouts, who have been
brought to their present workplace by their parents or relatives.
It also appears that they all come from landless and relatively
large families. Finally, more than 80 per cent of children trapped
in the worst forms of child labour have migrated for work. With
the exception of children bonded into agricultural labour and
children working as long distance porters in the rural areas of
Nepal, the vast majority of children work in urban areas.
Factors that generate child labour in Nepal can be summarized as follows:
- On the demand side, while the society at large is aware of the
ill effects of child labour, both to the individual child as well
as to the nation, the existing societal attitude remains largely
indifferent to it. Legal provisions on safeguarding child rights
and preventing child labour are inadequate in enforcement and
children continue to be hired as child labourers. In rural areas,
children work mostly in the agricultural sector, while in urban
areas, they can be found in almost all kinds of work requiring
manual labour;
- The supply side of this is characterised by illiteracy of the
parents, lack of access to as well as low perceived value of education,
disharmony and diminishing family support, subsistence livelihoods
that push families, particularly in rural areas, to send their
children to work;
- The civil war is another factor contributing to child labour
in Nepal. In rural areas, many families prefer to send their children
to urban areas for fear of them being caught in the cross-fire,
or becoming a victim of the security forces or Maoists. As a result,
these children enter the child labour market and very often end
up in the worst forms of child labour.
Note 1 - Central Department of Population
Studies, Tribhuwan University: Child labour situation in Nepal
Report from migration and employment survey, 1995/96 (Kathmandu,
1997), survey undertaken with the support of the ILO.
Note 2 - 'Economic activity'
includes both paid and unpaid, casual and illegal work as well as
work in the informal sector, but excludes unpaid domestic services
within own household.
Note 3 - Central Department of Population
Studies, Tribhuwan University: Child labour situation in Nepal
Report from migration and employment survey, 1995/96 (Kathmandu,
1997).
Note 4 - Ibidem.
Note 5 - Ibidem.
Note 6 - These include five rapid assessments on five selected worst forms of child labour (children in bonded labour, child ragpickers, child porters, child domestic workers and child trafficking) that have been completed by the Central Department of Population Studies (CDPS) and the National Labour Academy (NLA), as well as earlier studies on children in mining and in the carpet sector.
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