Contributing family workers, female (% of females employed) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators



Other country level comparisons:
Loading map, please wait...

Less → More


Contributing family workers are those workers who hold “self-employment jobs” as own-account workers in a market-oriented establishment operated by a related person living in the same household. Source: International Labour Organization, Key Indicators of the Labour Market database.
Contributing family workers, female (% of females employed) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1Burkina Faso (1994)87.3
2Madagascar (2005)73
3Zambia (2000)61.8
4Morocco (2006)55.3
5Chad (1993)44.4
6Uganda (2003)40.5
7North Africa (2006)39.74
8Egypt (2006)32.6
9Senegal (1991)32.4
10Rwanda (1996)30
11Cameroon (2001)27.2
12Sierra Leone (2004)21.6
13Cape Verde (2000)14.8
14Algeria (2004)13.6
15Zimbabwe (2002)13.6
16Tanzania (2006)13
17Ethiopia (2006)12.7
18Mali (2004)10.2
19Namibia (2004)5.8
20Gabon (1993)5.3
21Mauritius (2007)4.7
22Botswana (2003)2.2
23Swaziland (1997)1.5
24Tunisia (1994)0.8
25Sao Tome and Principe (1991)0.7
26South Africa (2007)0.6
27Eritrea (1996)0.5
Country Comparison Graph