Asian Informal Workers

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A01=Mario Biggeri
A01=Santosh K. Mehrotra
Albania
Author_Mario Biggeri
Author_Santosh K. Mehrotra
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Census
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employment
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gendered labour dynamics
GNP Growth
Hold
home-based employment
hybrid
Hybrid Seeds Production
IMF
Indonesian Labour Force
industrial
Industrial Outworker
Informal Economy
Informal Employment
Informal Labour Force
informal sector wage workers in Asia
Labour Intensive Manufacturing
labour market informality
Local Development
mario
Mario Biggeri
microenterprise clusters
Ne Si
NGO Initiative
Non-agricultural Labour Force
Nonagricultural Labour Force
Okra Production
outworker
production
protection
sector
seeds
social
social protection policy
subcontracted production
Tamil Nadu
TVEs
UNICEF Survey
Unorganised Sector

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415382755
  • Weight: 1110g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Dec 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This thoroughly researched volume surveys the nature and extent of 'informal' work in Asia, which is a powerful and under-studied force in the region.

After over half a century of development, even in the fast growing economies of Asia, the formal sector, and industrial jobs have grown rather slowly, and most non-agricultural employment growth has occurred in the informal economy. At the same time as this, there has been a feminization of informal workers and growth in subcontracted homework.

Drawing on detailed case studies carried out in five Asian countries - two low income (India and Pakistan) and three middle income (Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines) – where subcontracted production, usually by women and children working out of home, is now widespread, this insightful book acknowledges that home-based work is the source of income diversification for poor families, but is also the source of exploitation of vulnerable workers and child labour as firms attempt to contain costs.

This wide-ranging and accessible survey, edited by key specialists in this field, along with an impressive team of contributors, examines the social protection needs of these workers arguing convincingly for public action to promote such work and protect these workers as a possible new labour intensive growth strategy in developing countries.

Santosh Mehrotra is a senior policy advisor for the United Nations Development Program based in Bangkok, Thailand. His books include Development With a Human Face (edited with R. Jolly, 1997); Eliminating Human Poverty: Macro economic Policies for Equitable Growth; and The Economics of Elementary Education in India.

Mario Biggeri is senior lecturer in development economics at the University of Florence, Italy. His research interests include economies of transition, international aid, clusters and informal activities, rural development, and child labour and child's capabilities, and he has published widely in these areas.

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