Type | Book Section - Social Protection for Informal Workers in Pakistan: A Case Study of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises |
Title | Social Protection for Informal Workers in Asia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
Page numbers | 219-252 |
URL | http://www.developmentpathways.co.uk/resources/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/sp-informalworkers-asia.pdf#page=238 |
Abstract | Extending social protection to Pakistan’s diverse, growing informal economy is a challenge. This study contributes to the policy discourse on extending social protection coverage to informal workers. It also provides insight into some pervasive factors that impede the extension of social protection to informal workers. Central to this study is a survey of 202 informal workers employed in three subsectors of Pakistan’s small and medium-sized enterprise sector (construction, garment manufacturing, and street vending). Most workers surveyed are uneducated and live in rural or semi-urban areas. Members of their households lack adequate employment skills and have incomes that are too low to support savings. Thus, they remain vulnerable to transitory poverty and economic shocks. Around half of the workers surveyed receive monthly payments that amount to less than, or around, the minimum wage. About 45.0% of respondents have no employment contracts, and of those that did, only 21.6% have written contracts, while the rest have only verbal contracts. The study finds that overall working conditions in the informal sector to be unsatisfactory. There is little evidence of factory owners ensuring safety measures for workers exposed to hazardous materials or providing appropriate safety equipment. Women are particularly vulnerable because of their concentration in home-based work with lower wages and limited access to social protection. Trade unions are largely absent from the informal economy, and there is also a general lack of awareness among informal workers about their basic labor rights. This study recommends hiring only from registered contractors, applying recommended minimum wage rates for domestic workers, and introducing adequate labor welfare standards for factory workers. Informal workers need government support, such as a basic level of economic security through regular work or wages, to integrate into mainstream social protection schemes. |
» | Pakistan - Enterprise Survey 2013 |