Informality and Globalisation
In Search of a New Social Contract
Globalisation and rapid technological change have radically transformed labour markets, affecting the lives and prospects of billions of workers. Those in the informal economy, the vast bulk of the workforce in the Global South, have been bearing the brunt. This report is for policy makers seeking to address the factors that make those workers in informality vulnerable. It provides them with a distinctive cross-country comparison of recent informality trends, and how they were affected by the recent crises such as the COVID-19 epidemic, casting light on the impacts of sub-contracting models in global value chains, and digital labour platforms. It argues that an inclusive recovery and greater resilience to future crises necessitate that many countries renew their social contracts, to make them more inclusive of informal workers and their families.
Preface
The global reality of informal work today is one of both change and continuity. Where globalisation and technology bring about new activities, too often they informalise previously formal employment and enable new forms of informal work; yet in activities that continue to be dominated by precarious and low-income self-employment, such as agriculture in the poorest countries, informality remains the norm.
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