Economically active children, male (% of male children ages 7-14) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators



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Economically active children refer to children involved in economic activity for at least one hour in the reference week of the survey. Source: Understanding Children's Work project based on data from ILO, UNICEF and the World Bank.
Economically active children, male (% of male children ages 7-14) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1Benin (2006)76.1
2Guinea-Bissau (2000)67.4
3Central African Republic (2000)66.5
4Chad (2004)64.4
5Ethiopia (2005)64.3
6Sierra Leone (2005)63.6
7Mali (2006)55
8Burkina Faso (2004)49
9Zambia (2005)48.93
10Ivory Coast (2006)47.7
11Somalia (2006)45.5
12Tanzania (2001)41.47
13Malawi (2006)41.3
14Togo (2006)40.54
15Kenya (2000)40.1
16Democratic Republic of the Congo (2000)39.9
17Uganda (2006)39.82
18Burundi (2000)38.38
19Liberia (2007)37.8
20Rwanda (2000)36.1
21Lesotho (2000)34.18
22Gambia (2005)33.9
23Angola (2001)30
24Republic of the Congo (2005)29.9
25South Africa (1999)29
26Madagascar (2001)26.12
27Senegal (2005)24.4
28Sudan (2000)21.45
29Namibia (1999)16.19
30Zimbabwe (1999)15.3
31Cameroon (2001)14.47
32Morocco (1999)13.5
33Egypt (2005)11.5
34Swaziland (2000)11.43
Country Comparison Graph