Type | Conference Paper - Special IARIW - SAIM Conference on “Measuring the Informal Economy in Developing Countries” |
Title | Informal Sector and Informal Workers in India |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
City | Kathmandu |
Country/State | Nepal |
URL | http://www.iariw.org/papers/2009/5a naik.pdf |
Abstract | It is well known t hat a major part of the workforce in India and o ther developing countries work in informal sector. Informal sector has become an increasingly popular subject of study, not just in economics, but also in sociology and anthropology. Keith Hart was th e first person to introduce the term „Informal Sector? . H e introduced it while making a presentation on “Informal income opportunities and urban employment in Ghana” in Institute of Development Studies ( IDS ) in September 1971 at a conference co - organized b y Rita Cruise O?Brien and Richard Jolly on urban employment in Africa months before International Labour Organisation (ILO) employment mission to Kenya came with its report “ Employment Incomes and Equality ” (jolly , 2006). Hart distinguished formal and informal (both legitimate and illegitimate) income opportunities on the basis of whether the activity entailed wage or self - employment (Hart, 1973). The refore the concept of informal sector used by H art was limited to small self - employed individ ual workers. Although H art?s concept of informal sector had some limitations , the introduction of this concept made it possible to incorporate activities that were previously ignored in theoretical models of development and in national economic accounts (S waminathan, 1991). |