Wage and salary workers, male (% of males employed) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators



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Wage and salaried workers (employees) are those workers who hold the type of jobs defined as “paid employment jobs,” where the incumbents hold explicit (written or oral) or implicit employment contracts that give them a basic remuneration that is not directly dependent upon the revenue of the unit for which they work. Source: International Labour Organization, Key Indicators of the Labour Market database.
Wage and salary workers, male (% of males employed) - Labor, migration and population - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1South Africa (2007)83.5
2Swaziland (1997)82.7
3Eritrea (1996)79.6
4Seychelles (1987)78.5
5Mauritius (2007)77.2
6Namibia (2004)76
7Djibouti (1991)75.4
8Botswana (2003)74.4
9Sao Tome and Principe (1991)72.3
10Tunisia (1994)70.5
11Egypt (2006)63.7
12Algeria (2004)61.9
13Gabon (1993)58.6
14North Africa (2006)58.5
15Zimbabwe (2002)51
16Ethiopia (2006)49.3
17Morocco (2006)46.8
18Cape Verde (2000)43.8
19Cameroon (2001)29.3
20Malawi (1987)29
21Zambia (2000)25.7
22Lesotho (1999)22.5
23Uganda (2003)22.2
24Madagascar (2005)16
25Tanzania (2006)15.3
26Mali (2004)15.2
27Senegal (1991)14.4
28Sierra Leone (2004)11.3
29Rwanda (1996)9.4
30Chad (1993)8.8
31Burkina Faso (1994)5.8
Country Comparison Graph