Informal workers make cities work for all: 3 stories from Thailand, India and Colombia

Those outside the formal workforce remain stigmatised even though they contribute significantly to the economy. However, three countries have made the effort to bring informal workers into society.

street vendor india2
There are an estimated 10 million street vendors in India who make up the informal economy. Image: Eric Wienke, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Think of the delicious food stands in Southeast Asia, the street performers in Africa, the rickshaw driver in Bangladesh, and the invisible home-based workers who embroider garments and stitch shoes in India. What do they all have in common? They are all part of the global informal workforce.

Most of us do not realise how many people are employed in the informal economy and how much they contribute collectively to the urban and national economy. A new World Resources Report paper, “Including the Excluded: Supporting Informal Workers for More Equal and Productive Cities in the Global South“, shows that informal workers are crucial to economies around the world—and urges new policy approaches to support them.

Globally, informal employment represents just over 60 per cent of total employment and nearly 44 per cent of urban employment. In some cities of the global south, the informal economy employs 80 per cent of the working population.

As huge as the informal economy is, governments rarely plan for or accommodate informal workers. Economists, urban planners and development practitioners have long assumed that with development, the informal economy would wither away. But this has not happened—the informal economy is large, diverse and persistent.

In Mexico, informal workers make up 60 per cent of the workforce and generate 30 per cent of the country’s gross value added (GVA). In India, 36 per cent of all enterprises are informal and home-based. Overall, estimates indicate that outside agriculture, informal enterprises generate one-quarter to one-half of GVA: 50 per cent in countries in West Africa, 46 per cent in India, 29 per cent in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, and 25 per cent in Latin America.

The informal economy is an integral feature of the economic landscape of cities. It is time for cities to recognise and value the contribution of informal workers. If cities aspire to increase economic productivity, the way forward is to include informal workers in the formal processes and institutions of urban governance, planning and finance.

The informal economy: Large, persistent and diverse

In many cities of the global south, population growth is exceeding employment growth. This trend is expected to continue into the foreseeable future, and, as a result, the informal economy will continue to expand. If the informal economy creates more jobs than the formal economy and significantly contributes to economic productivity, shouldn’t cities embrace it?

Instead, informal workers are often stigmatised and penalised for simply trying to earn a living. Everyone depends on the informal economy in some way, either directly or indirectly through its linkages with the formal economy. Yet, cities continue to ignore the clear majority of the working poor in the informal economy, who face harassment, including evictions from their homes and workplaces and confiscation of their goods.

The informal economy is an integral feature of the economic landscape of cities. It is time for cities to recognise and value the contribution of informal workers.

“The most pressing challenge for urban informal workers is that they are not recognised as legitimate actors,” says Martha Chen, co-founder of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) and a co-author of the paper.

“There are dominant narratives that say that they are illegal, they are criminal, they have low productivity, they are a drag on the economy. And these dominant narratives are then reflected in the city’s policies, plans and practices, making it very difficult for them to earn an honest living in a very harsh regulatory environment.”

 

3 inclusive cities that found creative ways to work with informal workers

In three types of informal workers—home-based workers, street vendors and waste pickers—who represent a significant share of the urban self-employed who are directly impacted by city policies. The paper highlights several examples of inclusionary policies and practices which have resulted from the successful collaboration between inclusive cities and informal worker organisations.

Home-Based Workers in Bangkok, Thailand – An organisation of home-based informal workers who produce a range of goods and services from their homes, HomeNet Thailand, convinced relevant government agencies to address the transportation needs of informal workers resettled on the periphery of the city. As a result, the Bangkok Mass Transit Authority (BMTA) approved two additional buses from the resettlement area to a main market area and has promised to build a pedestrian bridge over a dangerous road crossing in the resettlement area. Persistent advocacy work also led to the Homeworkers Protection Act and Domestic Workers Ministerial Regulation, which entitle home-based workers and domestic workers in Thailand to a minimum wage, occupational health and safety protection, and other fundamental labour rights.

Street Vendors in Bhubaneshwar, India – City authorities worked with the street vendors’ organisation to develop an inclusive model creating 54 dedicated vending zones and approximately 2,600 kiosks for informal street vendors to operate from. Under this arrangement, city residents can continue benefiting from street vendor activities, while the vendors can operate in designated zones without the risk of harassment or confiscation. Bhubaneshwar became one of the first cities in India to acknowledge street vendors as an integral part of the city and designated space for them through a complex public, private and community partnership model.

Waste Pickers in Bogota, Colombia – A 2014 national decree ruled that cities across Colombia should develop solid waste management schemes which recognise and pay waste pickers to collect, transport and sort recyclable waste. This was the result of decades of advocacy by waste pickers in Bogota, who convinced the municipal government to pay for their services. Since that ruling, as a result of the joint efforts of the Asociación de Recicladores de Bogotá (ARB) and WIEGO, eight other cities across Colombia are now paying waste pickers for their waste collection and recycling services, which benefit everyone by keeping the streets clean and diverting recyclables from landfills.

Finding win-win solutions—together

These cities, and others, have demonstrated that when informal workers are recognised and protected, everyone wins. This requires collaboration among city governments, civic organisations, worker associations and other key stakeholders.

Cities need to examine their policies and practices with a view to empowering informal workers. That means first stopping the practices that impact negatively on informal work, such as harassment, evictions, and relocations. Second, in a more positive approach, cities need to actively support informal workers by providing access to public goods and public spaces, social protection and improved services.

Finally, and most importantly, they must give informal worker organisations a seat at the policy table. Including the voice of informal workers (and other stakeholders) in the formal processes of urban governance is the best way to negotiate policies and plans that balance competing interests and promote social justice.

For cities to be more equal and meet the global commitments to inclusive, fair and sustainable cities in UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 11 and the New Urban Agenda of Habitat III, it is imperative that urban informal workers are recognised, valued and supported.

Valeria Gelman is the Communications Specialist & Program Coordinator II at the WRI’s Ross Center for Sustainable Cities, and Jillian Du is a Research Assistant at the WRI Ross Center For Sustainable Cities. This post is republished from the WRI blog

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