Guide on Gender Analysis of Census Data Full Draft of 6 December 2012 Contents


Chapter 10: Work, Economic Activities and Social Protection



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Chapter 10:
Work, Economic Activities and Social Protection



1. What is it?
413. Work refers to the participation of individuals in economic activities, both paid and unpaid production for a period longer than one-hour during the reference period, and which delineates employment from unemployment. The population census directly collects data on the economic activities and characteristics of individuals in the areas of employment status, type of work, and the sources and/or amounts of income received by individuals and/or households (United Nations, 2008 a).
414. The economically active population, or equivalently the formal labour force, is made up of all persons above the minimum age specified, generally 15 years of age or older, who report being available to furnish the supply of labour for the production of goods and services during a short reference period (e.g. one week, one day), and are usually registered as being “unemployed.” The economically active population can be categorized into two groups: employed and unemployed.


  1. Employed comprises all persons of a specified age, generally 15 and over, who work for pay, profit or family gain in cash or kind or who do nonpaid work for a family business or farm. If persons are temporarily absent during the reference period, they are considered to be employed??????.




  1. Unemployed comprises all individuals above a specified age, generally 15, who do not work, are available for work, and who did actively seek work during a reference period.

415. The group, inactive or not currently active persons or persons not in the labour force, is comprised of persons not fitting the categories of employed or unemployed during the reference period, and further, those who are outside of the specified age defined for the economically active population. A person may be economically inactive because one is in school, training or college, engaging in household duties, retired or aged out of the labour force, or sick, infirm or disabled. Women are more likely than men to fall into this category, as they typically produce services – such as preparing and serving meals or caring for children, the sick and elderly within a household – that are consumed by the household.


416. Occupation is defined as the type of work done in a job by employed persons. It is recommended that NSOs collect information on occupation in accordance with the latest revision available of the International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) at the following URL: http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/isco/index.htm (ILO 2010).
417. Industry refers to the kind of production or economic activity where persons work. It is recommended to collect information on industry in accordance with the most recent revision of the International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC) (United Nations, 2008). Important gender differences are observed in terms of economic sector. Women are predominantly and increasingly employed in the service sector and the relative importance of the industrial sector as a source of employment for women continued to decline in the last two decades in all regions (United Nations, 2010 b). This preponderance of women in service work may be due to the general development of service work as women have entered formal sector employment en masse after 1960, or it could also be linked to industry or employer discrimination on the one hand, or to a gender preference of women to work in the service sector. For example, this preference could be driven by social expectations for what types of work are acceptable for women, or by different childhood socialisation by sex (i.e. caretaking among girls who then are represented in caretaking professions such as nursing and social work in many societies). By nation, these factors may differ and are potential engendered analysis points.
418. Informal sector work includes persons who are employed in a reference period in the untaxed and unregulated part of an economy [not the official definition]. The informal sector economic activity is not included in the gross national product (GNP) [not true: it should be included and often is], yet it comprises more than one-half of the economically active population in low-income countries and is present in middle- and high-income countries, too (International Labour Organization, 2005).

419. Status in employment describes the type of explicit or implicit employment contract [self-employed people (and others) do not have contracts] the economically active person has. It is recommended that the economically active population be classified by employment status into the following groups: 1) Employees, 2) Employers, 3) Own-account workers, 4) Contributing family workers, 5) Members of producers' cooperatives, and 6) Persons not classifiable by status.


420. Time worked is a measure that typically asks the number of hours per week employed persons work. ‘Time worked’ data help to ensure a more accurate measurement of the relative contributions of men and women to the workforce and identify gender gaps. Time worked is the total time actually spent producing goods and services, within regular working hours and as overtime, during the reference period adopted for economic activity in the census. It is recommended that the reference period is short, for example, the week preceding the census. If the reference period is long, for example, the 12 months preceding the census, time worked should be measured in larger units such as weeks. If a person has more than one job during the reference period, it is recommended to record both total time worked from all jobs and the time worked in the main job for which occupation is being registered. In many countries, especially in Europe, women having young children may choose or may have limited options other than to work part-time. Part-time employment is much more common among women than among men globally, with the prevalence rate for women exceeding twice that for men in about three quarters of the countries (United Nations, 2010 a).
421. These higher participation rates of women in part-time work are due in part to the difficulties women experience in combining family responsibilities and work life. In those countries where child care services are very expensive (i.e. as costly as a salary earned by the woman), or poor quality and/or not widely available, it is difficult for women to work full-time in the formal labour market. It is not necessarily a “free choice” for women, but rather women’s participation in the labour market while also juggling family responsibilities and perhaps even a limited child care and support structure. Where affordable, quality, full-time child care is accessible, women typically work full-time (e.g. Sweden, Norway). For example, the Netherlands has the highest percentage of women working part-time, which is a response to an environment of limited, affordable, full-time child care. This is a gender concern.
422. Full-time and part-time are defined as follows:
a) Full-time work typically refers to working at least 35 hours in a week [is this the internationally agreed definition ? check with ILO].
b) Part-time work refers to a national-level definition of work that is less than a full-time threshold and more than one hour in a typical week. [if 35 hours is the limit, why not say that part time is less than 35 hours ?]

423. The institutional sector of employment describes the legal organization and primary functions, behaviour and objectives of the enterprise that are associated with a job as defined by the System of National Accounts (SNA) as the following categories: 1) corporation, 2) general government, 3) non-profit institutions serving households (e.g. churches, cultural and sports clubs and charitable institutions), and 4) households.


424. Place of work is the location of an employed person’s main job and typically takes the following categories: 1) work at home, 2) no fixed place of work, and 3) with a fixed place of work outside the home. However, the place of work categories may differ by nation determined by local relevancy (e.g. categories for Serbia include 1) at home, 2) on the farm, 3) no fixed place of work, 4) abroad, and 5) fixed place outside the home). In the 2011 census of Albania, 2) and 5) were merged and 4) was disaggregated to identify neighbouring countries. Mauritius (2011) distinguishes between those working at a fixed place outside the home, those without a fixed place of work, those working at home and those working outside the country. Swizerland (2010) distinguishes between those working from home, at a fixed place of work and those working at varying locations. The Costa Rican census actually tries to establish how far away the place of work is from the home.

425. The right to social protection is enshrined in Article 22 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (United Nations, 1948) which states that every human being has the right to social security. Article 25 protects the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond an individual’s control. Social security has two main dimensions, specifically “income security” and the “availability of medical care.” The preface to the World Social Security Report 2010/11 (ILO, 2010 b) notes that while some level of social security protection exists in all countries, just one-third of countries and 28 per cent of the world’s population have comprehensive social protection systems covering all branches of social security defined in the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention (No. 102) (ILO, 1952), and about one-third have no access to any health facilities or services at all. Statutory unemployment social security protection exists in just 78 countries (or 42 per cent).


426. Of persons over age 65 in high-income countries 75 per cent receive pension benefits, compared with less than 20 per cent of those in low-income countries (ILO, 2010 b). In less developed regions, old-age pension or social insurance coverage is found in the formal and public sectors, and women are often not covered because they are less likely to be employed in these sectors than men. Informal employment is the main source of work for women outside agriculture in these regions (United Nations, 2010 a). As a result, most of the world’s elderly, a majority of whom are women, depend either on social security systems or the support of their children in order to stay out of poverty.
427. Although the social security concept is not intrinsically linked to work or employment, most social security systems in the world are organized around employment. Being or having been employed, usually only in the formal sector, is often a precondition for becoming eligible for benefits, e.g. health benefits for employees and their families, old age pensions based on pension contributions accumulated during one’s working life, or unemployment benefits based on previous income and the number of years worked prior to dismissal. Typically, employment in the formal sector is also the precondition for maternity benefits. Some countries (New Zealand, Namibia, several European countries), however, have a flat-rate minimum old age pension benefit based on the number of years of residence in the country, rather than the number of years worked.
428. The Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses, Rev. 2 (2008 a) do not provide specific recommendations on gathering and analysing data on social security, yet many countries gather data relating to employment, receipt of social security, contributions to social security, and health insurance coverage. Of the 99 countries examined within the most recent, long form census round (2005-14) as presented in Appendix X, 55.6 per cent of countries ask whether respondents are currently working or employed, 13 per cent ask about receipt of social security, 4 per cent ask about contributions to social security, and 12.1 per cent ask whether the respondents have health insurance. Update this information.
2. Why is it important?
429. Women’s economic independence through employment and productive resources is protected within the CEDAW (United Nations, 1979). In addition, the Beijing Platform (i.e. Fourth World Conference on Women) issued a commitment for women’s full economic independence and access to work and productive resources, and the Millennium Declaration linked full and productive employment and decent work for both women and men as a necessary step to promote economic development and do away with poverty and hunger.
430. The Fourth World Conference on Women (United Nations, 1995) commits to promote women's economic independence, specifically through employment and access to productive resources and opportunities, as well as through the coordination of work and family responsibilities for women and men. Further, the Millennium Declaration commits to full and productive employment and decent work for all, both men and women, as part of Goal 1, to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger. And legally binding because most countries have ratified it, the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) (1979) protects women’s access to work.
431. Statistics on the economic characteristics of employed, unemployed and inactive persons gathered in the population census can be used in combination with other demographic and social factors (e.g. education, household and dwelling information) to construct a comprehensive picture of the socio-economic situation. Economic data gathered in the population census also provide baseline information from which survey data and administrative data can be related and evaluated.
432. There is a marked difference, 25 percentage points, in the global labour force participation rate between men and women in 2010; 77 per cent of men participate in the labour force compared with 52 per cent of women (United Nations, 2010 a). In addition to this large gap in participation, which has persisted for 20 years, there is considerable occupational segregation and a gender wage gap that continue to persist in all regions of the world. Further, women increasingly are employed in the services sector and within informal economic activities, which generally commands less in remuneration than the industrial sector (United Nations, 2010 a). In some countries, e.g. in Central America, Colombia and Venezuela, average salaries for women are the same or even higher than those for men, but non-salary incomes are substantially lower, due to the informal natural of much of the work carried out by women (ECLAC, 2011). Beyond sector differences on how women and men are engaged, there remains a need to examine the different conditions of employment for women and men. Working from home may allow women who would not otherwise have the opportunity to be employed to exercise an economic activity, but if more women work from home than men, it can reinforce the marginalization and devaluation of female work (Chant and Pedwell, 2008).
433. Adding to this, women actually work longer hours on average than men when both paid and unpaid work are considered. Women spend at least twice as much time as men in unpaid domestic work (Bianchi et al., 2000). The number of hours that women spend on housework and community and volunteer work exceeds those spent by men for the same purposes. The average number of hours per day women spend in unpaid housework and community activities ranges from around three (in Denmark) to over six (in Turkey) (United Nations, 2010 a). At the same time, men spend less than one hour on these activities in several countries such as Cambodia and Pakistan. This is important, because women’s unpaid domestic and caretaking work is considered household consumption and not counted as being employed as part of the economically active population. Because unpaid work mainly done by women is not included in the national accounting systems, it goes under-estimated. However, understanding this under-estimated household work situation through census questions (i.e. whether water is fetched from a well or wood collected for cooking compare to less labour-intensive alternatives) allows us to understand women’s roles, opportunities and constraints, and overall life chances compared with men. Finally, women who do not participate in the labour market depend on the resources provided by their spouse or partner or another relative, and therefore are more vulnerable in case of widowhood or separation (United Nations, 2010 a).
434. Social security protection mechanisms are important for women because they are more likely than men to live longer and have more interruptions in their work than men. The latter may result in lower benefits during retirement, especially in systems with a tight link between contributions and benefits (Ståhlberg et al., 2008). In such systems, women who do full-time housekeeping and child rearing work are left vulnerable. In more developed countries, women rely on survivor benefits through their husband’s work, but in less developed countries there is often no benefit. Even in developed countries, women often earn less than men and spend more time out of the work force due to caregiving responsibilities, which results in “gaps” in their earnings histories referred to as “the cost of caring.” At the birth of a child, maternity leave is an important social protection for the mother as well as the child and others living in the household. When women take time off from formal employment to care for children and the elderly, it is again a situation when women are more likely than men not to earn income or save for the future. Retired women generally have less access to other sources of income, such as pensions, assets and earnings, and hence rely on social security more than men to avoid poverty in older age (Hayes, Hartmann and Lee, 2010). As a result of women marrying older spouses and living longer than men, they are more likely to be widowed and then must rely on old-age pensions and social security payments for longer periods than men. Women are also more likely to deplete their financial resources caring for a spouse. In all, these demographic patterns may place women in a vulnerable economic situation (Hayes, Hartmann and Lee, 2010).
435. Systems based on years of residence rather than work, which generally imply substantial transfers from contributors to non-contributors, are particularly beneficial to women who do not have a long employment history. For example, in Japan the national pension scheme implemented in the 1960s succeeded in expanding pension insurance to more than 18 million previously uninsured workers, the majority of whom were women (Chen, Jhabvala and Lund, 2002). ILO (2010) maintains that a big challenge of social protection is extending maternity benefits. At present, cash benefits before and after birth are limited to formal sector employees, and there are huge differences in the amount of benefit across rich and poor countries, and across rural and urban areas. Adding to this, while less than 35 per cent of women in rural areas are estimated to have access to professional health services in low-income countries, about 70 per cent of urban women have access. However, this higher rate is still substantially less, over 20 per cent lower, than health services access in high-income countries (ILO, 2010 b).
436. Access to social security is considered requisite for gender equality. The Plan of Action of the first World Conference on Women (1975), for instance, explicitly referred to the need of ensuring women the provision of social security protection, equal in all aspects to that of men. Other human rights treaties, such as the ICPD Programme of Action, have also expressed concern with the increasing numbers and proportions of elderly people in the world and emphasized the need of developing and ensuring quality systems of economic and social security in old age.

3. Data issues
437. The way work is defined and measured is crucial to measuring how employment and income opportunities may be different by sex. Men are more often employed outside the house with a paid job, while women do most of the unpaid domestic work and are more likely to be misclassified as homemakers when only basic questions are asked. Because women are generally engaged in homemaking duties, or cultural perceptions relating to sex roles on the part of the respondent or the enumerator, women’s economic activity status may be misclassified and therefore under-counted. Indeed, there remains a need to collect data on time-use to capture time spent by men and women on paid and unpaid work, both in the home and the labour market.
Kim raised the issue of village work as a category of work.
438. Occupational data should be coded at the lowest possible level of the classification in order to identify gender differences in occupation. For example, the ISCO 08 (ILO, 2010 a) classifies "Health professionals" under item 22, but differentiate at the level of three digits “Medical doctors” (item 221), “Nursing and midwifery professionals” (222), “Traditional and complementary medicine professionals” (223), “Paramedical practitioners” (224), “Veterinarians” (225), and “other health professionals” (226). While all of these categories are health professionals, a significantly greater number of women are employed as nurses compared with men. Failure to collect specific categories may result in categories that are too broad to capture the differences in prevalence of men and women within a particular occupational category, and further risks conflating two categories which may command vastly different incomes and statuses. 1. You can go up to the fourth digit; 2. How feasible is it to do that in censuses ? 3. We are not really trying to give advice to countries on how they should design their census forms.
439. Comparisons between the wages of men and women are often made in weekly or monthly terms, without considering that part-time work is more common among women. In order to make meaningful comparisons, wages have to be computed on the basis of the number of hours worked. Additionally, income data such as self-employment, property income and non-cash or in kind income can be difficult to collect in population censuses. Because income is typically more easily gathered in a sample survey of households, depending on the national requirements countries may ask limited information on cash income. This paragraph is out of place
440. Because the census data for institutional sector of employment are captured with pre-coded alternatives, borderline classifications may be categorized according to the subjective understanding of the respondent rather than the intended distinctions. Any analysis and resulting statistics should keep this in mind as a possible limitation of the data.
441. Even though the Principles and Recommendations do not make specific recommendations on the analysis of data relating to social security as defined by the ILO, many countries gather these data (e.g. currently working or employed, receipt of social security, contributions to social security, and health insurance coverage). A question to capture maternity benefit or loss of work after the birth of a child may provide a useful measure of women’s status within a country. If this question is repeated longitudinally, cohorts can be followed over time. Alternatively, cohorts of women by age and by number of children including the last birth could be constructed with data from one census administration to examine loss of work due to the birth of a child or a critical number of children.
4. Tabulations
442. The Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses Rev 2 (United Nations, 2008 a) recommend several tabulations to describe how persons’ work and economic lives may be shaped differently by gender. The usual or current activity status is the basis for these tabulations, yet the activity rates used to monitor labour force participation exclude unpaid work, such as own-account production or caring for children and the elderly [careful: own-account production is employment, caring for children is not]. Hence, women’s labour force participation is lower and likely to be underestimated compared with that of men at all stages of the life cycle.
P7.1-R Population ... years of age and over, by usual (or current) activity status,

educational attainment, age and sex*

P7.2-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main occupation, age and sex*

P7.3-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main industry, age and sex*

P7.4-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main status in

employment, age and sex*

P7.5-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main status in

employment, main industry and sex

P7.6-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main status in

employment, main occupation and sex

P7.7-R Usually (or currently) active population by activity status, main industry, main occupation and sex*

P7.8-R Population not usually (or currently) active, by functional categories, age and sex*


443. As discussed above, the interpretation of these tables is likely to show a lower labour market participation of women compared with men. Additional tabs might explore whether the gender gap in labour market participation is explained by educational attainment. An engendered perspective would ask: ‘Do women and men at similar levels of educational attainment have similar labour market participation rates?’ Are women and men at similar levels of educational attainment represented in the same occupations or industries at similar rates? Are women and men at similar levels of educational attainment represented in the same functional categories (e.g. management, factory line) within work organisations. Some gaps in labour market participation may be the result of women being less educated compared with men, or alternatively, there may be cultural reasons (e.g. discrimination, social norms, laws limiting women’s work) that limit women’s participation at the same rate as of men. For many women, it is not a choice.
444. As mentioned above, some censuses, such as the Australian and Canadian censuses of 2006 and the Korean censuses of 2005 and 2010, have specific questions on care-giving activities, including child care. The 2005 census of the Republic of Korea established, for instance, that 5.4 per cent of children between ages 0 and 12 are cared for by their grandparents during the daytime. Australia asked questions on unpaid domestic work carried out and care given to family members or others because of disability, a long term illness or problems related to age. With respect to child care, it asked: “In the last two weeks did the person spend time looking after a child, without pay? The data results, which were computed at the national level and excluding cases where the information was not stated or not applicable, were as follows:

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