By SAMUEL SIRINGI and SAMWEL BORN MAINA
Kenya has
20.2 million people of working age. Of these, 15.4 million — 76.3 per cent —
are not paid for their labour, according to the report by the Kenya National
Bureau of Statistics and the Society for International Development.
In Summary
- Nationally, 7.7 per cent of people aged between 15 and 64 years are idle, with no source of income. Overall, the proportion of the idle is much higher in towns than in rural areas.
- The survey found out that 7.3 per cent of people with secondary education and 6.5 per cent of those who had primary education had no work. It also indicates that most of those who were retired or were homemakers had no education.
- In the towns, 43.2 per cent of the population with secondary education worked for pay, while 18.8 per cent of those with no education had no work at all.
Three
quarters of Kenyan workers are not paid for the work they do, according to a
new survey.
Many of
them are employed in family-owned businesses or farms.
Kenya has
20.2 million people of working age. Of these, 15.4 million — 76.3 per cent —
are not paid for their labour, according to the report by the Kenya National
Bureau of Statistics and the Society for International Development.
Only 4.8
million Kenyans who are of working age have paying jobs, according to the
survey to be published Tuesday.
Nationally,
7.7 per cent of people aged between 15 and 64 years are idle, with no source of
income. Overall, the proportion of the idle is much higher in towns than in
rural areas.
In Nairobi,
11.3 per cent of those who should be in jobs are unemployed, making it the
county with the highest level of unemployment.
UNEMPLOYMENT
Nyamira
County, on the other hand, has the lowest unemployment rate at 2.6 per cent.
Bomet, Tharaka Nithi, Kirinyaga, Kisii, Nyandarua, Bungoma and Narok are the
other counties with the low numbers of the unemployed.
The
report also said that the level of education, as expected, determines the job
opportunities available, with those having a secondary education and above
having an edge over the others.
At the
household level, families headed by men with secondary education and above were
better off than those headed by women with primary education and below.
At the
county level, Nairobi had the highest proportion of people in paying jobs at 47
per cent. The others are interns, students or simply unemployed.
It was
followed by Mombasa with 41 per cent and then Kiambu with 38 per cent. Turkana
and Wajir counties had the least number of the employed at six per cent. The
situation was worse in Wajir county, where 23.1 per cent of the population had
no jobs at all.
“The
proportion of people working for pay in Nairobi county is eight times more than
the proportion of people working for pay in Wajir and Turkana counties,” the
report says.
In the
urban areas, 16 per cent of the workers are engaged in family businesses while
11 per cent are involved in family agricultural holdings.
In rural
areas, nearly half of the working people are involved in family agricultural
holdings.
LABOUR
MARKET
This
means that majority of the country’s productive population is engaged in
agriculture (32.0 per cent) although they have no income to show for it.
“Kenya is
characterised by a labour market that includes household based enterprises,
subsistence agriculture and a small wage sector,” the report titled: ‘Exploring
Kenya’s Inequality: Pulling Apart or Pooling Together’, says.
The study
also found out that those with secondary education have most jobs for pay while
those with no education had a large stake in family agricultural holdings.
The
survey found out that 7.3 per cent of people with secondary education and 6.5
per cent of those who had primary education had no work. It also indicates that
most of those who were retired or were homemakers had no education.
In the
rural areas, 50 per cent of the people without an education were engaged with
family agricultural holding. However, some 20 per cent of the people with
secondary education were working for pay.
The
report found that family businesses were controlled by people with no
education.
In the
towns, 43.2 per cent of the population with secondary education worked for pay,
while 18.8 per cent of those with no education had no work at all.
And in a finding
that could exacerbate rural-urban migration, the survey found that people
working in towns were 2.4 times more likely to get paid for a job than their
rural counterparts.
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