Duality of female employment in Pakistan.
Kazi, Shahnaz ; Raza, Bilquees
The paper seeks to assess changes over time in the level and
pattern of women's employment in Pakistan and to analyse these
changes in the context of supply and demand factors influencing
women's participation in the labour market.
THE CHANGING SHARE OF WOMEN IN DIFFERENT OCCUPATIONAL GROUPS
Before proceeding to the main findings of the study it is necessary
to briefly mention the problems of data collection on women's
employment in Pakistan. The shortcomings of official data sources such
as the Labour Force Survey and the Population Census have been pointed
out in detail elsewhere [Afzal and Nasir (1987); Government of Pakistan (1986)] here it will suffice to state that women's economic
participation is greatly underestimated in official statistics mainly
due to unsuitable methods of data collection, inappropriate definitions
of activities and stress on recording only one activity, and the
cultural inhibition to admitting to women working.
Given these problems the present study relies primarily on data
from intensive micro-level surveys and the Agricultural Census in the
case of informal Sector employment of women since the limitations of
official data are particularly acute in these occupations, while
estimates of changes over time in women's share of formal sector
jobs (professionals, clerical, administrative and organized industry)
are mainly based on Labour Force Survey data.
The findings of the paper highlight the trend towards the duality
of female employment as reflected in the increased participation in the
labour market of women at the top and bottom end of the socio-economic
scale. Data from the Labour Force Survey indicate that females comprise
a significant and rising portion of the occupational category of
professionals and related workers. Between 1984-85 to 1987-88 the female
share in the occupational group of professionals and related workers has
risen from 15.5 to 18.3 percent of the total. Although there have been
some inroads into non-traditional areas like engineering, banking, and
law the numbers in these fields remain very limited, the major increase
under this occupational group has been confined to the professions of
teaching and medicine. Hence, in 1988 nearly one-third of all teachers
and one-fifth of all doctors were women. The demand for women in these
categories is itself the result of the segregation in society and the
subsequent need for female teachers for girls' schools and lady
doctors for female patients.
Among other white-collar jobs, such as managerial workers and
clerical workers the proportion of women is still extremely low.
Although the share of women among the clerical workers is very small at
2.9 percent it has nearly doubled in the four-year period between
1984-85 to 1987-88.
The evidence further indicates that with the exception of these
small proportions of highly qualified females. The great majority of
women are in a severely disadvantaged Position in the labour market and
their participation in the modern high productivity sector of the
economy has not increased during the course of development. Thus despite
industrialization, the urban female participation rates derived from
official Labour Force Survey data have shown a negligible increase over
nearly two decades rising from 3 percent to 5 percent between 1971-72 to
1987-88. The evidence of virtually unchanging rates of work
participation is contrary to findings from micro studies of urban areas
which point to an increasing influx of women workers particularly in the
informal sector. Data based on a survey of working women indicate that
the majority, irrespective of socio-economic class, belonged to families
where women have never worked before. A large number are shown to be
working in home-based piece rate employment [Shaheed and Mumtaz (1981);
Duncan (1989)]. However, a sizeable portion of activity in the informal
sector because of the nature of work such as income-earning activities
undertaken at home or work for the family enterprise is unlikely to be
captured by official statistics.
Evidence on women's employment in the manufacturing sector
provided in a recent nationwide survey of 2000 factories Hafeez (1983)
indicates that women's representation among regular industrial
employees is very low. The results of the study revealed that women
comprised only 5 percent of the employees in factories located in the
more developed provinces of Sindh and Punjab and, of these, female
employees which comprised only 20 percent were in regular employment as
compared to 50 percent of the male workers who were regular employees.
The tendency to relegate women to temporary, casual or contract work has
also been observed in selected factories in the Punjab [Khan (1986)].
Finally, with respect to agricultural workers, evidence from
Agricultural Census data and Labour Force Surveys indicate a rising
proportion or women in this occupational category. The Agricultural
Census data is widely acknowledged as the most reliable source of
national level information on women's participation in the
agricultural sector, however its coverage is limited to agricultural
households, including both farm and livestock holders. The 1972
Agricultural Census, provides information only on female participation
in agricultural work on the family farm. Thus it excludes
non-agricultural work on the family farm as well as work done for other
households. A comparison of Agricultural Census data for 1972 and 1980
for the category of agricultural work on own farm, indicates that labour
force participation rates of females aged 10 years or more increased
from 39 percent in 1972 to 54 percent in 1980. Further, the comparison
also shows an increase in the share of females among family workers in
agricultural households which rose from 35 percent in 1972 to 42 percent
in 1980. For the more recent period between 1984-85 to 1987-88, data
from the Labour Force Survey point to a continuation of this trend.
Female representation in the category of agricultural workers increased
from 14.5 percent in 1984-85 to 16.6 percent in 1987-88.
Thus, although women's contribution to the economy is now
widely acknowledged, much of the increase is taking place outside the
formal sector. With the exception of a few qualified women who are
making inroads at the highest level, the majority of women workers are
increasingly concentrated in agriculture and in the informal sector.
DEMANDS AND SUPPLY CONSTRAINTS ON FEMALE EMPLOYMENT
Demand Considerations
Demand-side constraints to female employment are, to some extent, a
part of the general problem of low levels of labour absorption in the
economy affecting both male and female labour force members. This is a
reflection of the macro-level problem of increasing capital intensity in
the economy. The period between 1978-79 to 1986-87 was marked by a
significant shift towards greater capital intensity in Pakistan both in
agriculture and, most noticeably, in industry [World Bank (1989)].
Agriculture
Mechanization in agriculture in the earlier period of the 70s was
mainly in the form of tubewells and tractors. Whereas the impact of
tubewell technology on labour use has been shown to be unambiguously
positive, empirical evidence on the employment effect of tractors does
not provide any conclusive answer [Irfan (1988)]. In agriculture,
mechanization in the form of harvesters and threshers is unambiguously
labour displacing and in most cases it displaces females who
traditionally undertake these activities [Agarwal (1985)]. However, in
Pakistan these machines have not yet been inducted on a large enough
scale to have a significant displacing effect on female labour use.
The findings of the previous section indicate that women's
share of agricultural work in the form of family labour has increased
over the period between 1971 and 1982. Certain developments in the rural
sector may have contributed to the increasing 'feminization'
of agriculture a tendency which has also been noted in other countries
of South Asia [Banerjee (1989)]. A possible explanation for this trend
may be the reduction of male labour supply available for agriculture due
to outmigration of males to urban areas and to the Gulf region as well
as the result of males diversifying into other non-farm occupations.
Employment generation in the rural non-farm sector has increased rapidly
in the 80s particularly in construction and transport [Irfan (1988)].
Growth in these sectors has been fueled by the inflow of remittances from migrants to the Gulf region, the large majority of whom belonged to
the rural sector. Outmigration to the Gulf region and the growing
importance of the rural off-farm workforce has squeezed labour supply
available to the agricultural sector. While men looked for other, more
lucrative, opportunities in the non-farm sector or abroad, women were
increasingly left with the responsibility of managing farm production.
Hence, the share of women in family farm labour has risen in the past
decade.
Manufacturing
Despite significant growth in value-added, estimated at an annual
average of 8 percent since 1971-72, large-scale industry has been
characterized by sharply falling rates of labour absorption with respect
to investment in fixed capital. To some extent the negative impact on
demand for female labour was countered by the rapid expansion of
employment in small-scale manufacturing estimated to have increased at
an average annual growth rate of 6 percent between 1978-79 and 1984-85
[World Bank (1989)]. Moreover, output of industries that traditionally
employ women such as garments and food processing has shown a sharply
rising trend in the 80s.
However, the evidence indicates that expansion of women's
employment in manufacturing has taken place outside the regular factory
workforce and mainly in the form of temporary and contract workers. This
trend is not only a reflection of the low absorptive capacity of the
large-scale industrial sector but also indicates a deliberate policy by
employers to exploit women as a cheaper and a more pliable form of
labour. Temporary workers are not entitled to labour benefits including
maternity leave and maternity benefits. Subcontracting, in addition, not
only allows the firms to circumvent labour legislation but also offers
overhead cost advantages and enables them to capture a cheap source of
labour supply. Women are an important part of the system of
subcontracting whereby they operate either from small workshops or from
their homes. Evidence from Pakistan as well as for some other Asian
countries indicates that the level of exploitation of these home based
workers is high [Shaheed and Mumtaz (1981); Bilquees and Hameed (1989)].
SUPPLY CONSTRAINTS
Culturally Determined Division of Labour
The low 'visibility' of women in the modern sector in
Pakistan is usually attributed to supply-side factors such as cultural
restrictions, household responsibilities and low levels of education and
skills. However, these cultural prescriptions of women's roles
appropriateness are changing as more women are being pushed into the
labour market because of dire necessity. Evidence from various micro
studies indicates that the vast majority of working women enter the
labour market in response to financial need [Hafeez (1984)]. More women
are seeking work and the majority belong to families where women have
not worked before.
The growing incidence of female-headed households in South Asia
provides further evidence of changing socio-cultural norms [Visaria
(1980)]. Economic pressures are overriding the basic tenet of the
patriarchal system that males should provide for their female relatives.
Although the extent of female-headed households in Pakistan is not
known, information based on a survey of working women in Karachi
indicates, that households headed by women belong to the poorest strata
of society [Kazi and Raza (1989)]. The lower economic status of
female-headed households reflects to a large extent the lower earning
capacity of women vis a vis that of men.
The Lack of Education and Skills
The persistence of gender disparities in education are a major
obstacle to improving the position of women in the labour market.
Although the gap between enrollment rates of males and females has
declined, substantial inequalities still remain. Further, the gender gap
in schooling rises at each level and is very high at the secondary
stage. Thus, the share of females in total enrollments falls from
one-third at the primary level to one-fourth at the secondary level
[Government of Pakistan (1989)]. Enrollment figures do not convey the
true picture of the gender gap in access to education within categories
since drop out rates vary and are significantly higher for girls. The
female dropout rate at the primary level is as high as 50 to 60 percent
[Government of Pakistan (1985)].
Male female differences are not only visible in the duration of
study but also in the field of study. In courses like engineering,
commerce and law the predominance of males is specially marked. The
male-female ratio of enrollments has been estimated to be as high as 27
in engineering as compared to 2.76 at the BA/BSc level [Khan (1985)].
Household Responsibilities.
The conflict between women's productive and reproductive roles
is put forward as a major reason for women staying at home to look after
their families. However, in the large majority of cases there is no
choice involved and employment is crucial to the economic survival of
the household. Available evidence from the Karachi survey indicates, on
the contrary, that the poorer strata of working women take up paid work
after an increase in family size. Supplementing family income in these
cases is a more overriding need than staying at home to look after young
children. Among poorer women in lower status occupations seeking
employment in itself is often precipitated by a large family size. Such
women are forced to enter the labour market because of their additional
household expenditure, due in most occasions to a large family size. In
such cases high fertility induces employment.
CONCLUSIONS
The findings of the paper highlight the trend towards duality of
female employment as reflected in the increased participation in the
labour market of women at the top and bottom end of the socio-economic
scale. Access to education and work options vary for women belonging to
different socio-economic strata. While women from the more privileged
classes in Pakistan have been able to acquire university education and
take up professional jobs, women from the poorest strata are pushed into
the labour market due to dire economic necessity. Employment for these
women is not a matter of equity or of self-fulfilment but is an
essential need for them to earn a living. They undertake a diverse range
of economic activities to meet their subsistence needs and are
increasingly relegated to casual, low paid, unskilled jobs in the
informal sector. The disadvantaged position of these women in the labour
market is usually attributed to supply-side factors such as cultural
restrictions, household responsibilities and low levels of education and
skills. However, it needs to be emphasized that the problem also
reflects a situation of restricted demand for women in the modern sector
which is only partly due to the overall low levels of labour absorption
in the organized sector and attitudinal barriers whereby women are not
considered as suitable for certain jobs. Keeping women out of regular
employment and in casual jobs in the informal sector with no security of
employment or other benefits is also the outcome of a deliberate policy
of exploiting a cheap source of labour.
Comments on "Duality of Female Employment in Pakistan"
This stimulating paper highlights the problems of female employment
in Pakistan-both the data problems and the substantive issues. It is to
be hoped that the deficiencies in the collection of data on female
employment that the paper analyses so well will be addressed
particularly through the Pakistan Integrated Household Survey, but also
through the Population Census and other surveys (e.g. the Labour Force
Survey).
The authors attempts to explain the level and pattern of female
employment in Pakistan in terms of supply and demand factors. The paper
makes an important contribution to the literature, but in my view there
is excessive emphasis on demand, rather than supply factors. To
understand fully the determinants of female employment, it should be
recognised that supply and demand factors are inextricably linked,
through the medium of what might be termed "cultural
appropriateness"; and that, because of this factor, it is necessary
to disaggregate women into three groups, who face different cultural
norms governing their degree of segregation/domestic responsibilities.
It is also helpful, from a policy perspective, to look not just at
employment, but also at the productivity, and therefore income of women
in particular jobs.
There are then, if one is permitted broad generalisations, three
principal (supply-side) factors determining female employment, but which
affect women differently according to which income/class group they
belong to. These factors are: level of education/experience; degree of
segregation/domestic responsibility; and income/satisfaction level. In
other words, whether they are qualified for a job, whether their
families permit them to work, and the benefits they as individuals
derive from the job. The only clear demand-side factor would be
employers biases. For instance, the relatively high proportion of women
working from the upperincome/class group would be due to their higher
levels of education/experience (compared with other groups of women, but
not compared with men in their class); their low degree of segregation
(since they are more "liberated"); and the professional
satisfaction they derive from the job. The constraints on their greater
employment would be appropriate education and training; employers gender
discrimination; and the relatively higher satisfaction they might derive
from their domestic rather than professional roles.
In the middle and lower-middle-income/class group, however, the
required segregation of women is a more powerful force, which outweighs
the relatively greater levels of education (compared with the lower
income group), and whatever income benefits they might derive from the
job. It is this supply-side factor which explains why female employment
is so low here.
In the lower-income/class group (most of whom are self-employed in
agriculture or micro-enterprises), the need for income is a much greater
force than segregation norms, which explains the high labour force
participation amongst women in this group. However, their lack of
education, skills and other inputs, as well as their household
responsibilities (rather than a "deliberate policy of
exploitation") condemns them to the informal sector, with flexible
hours and very low productivity and hence income. Since these women are
already employed in large numbers (whether outside or inside the home
doing "piece-rate"), the main concern here is their low
productivity.
If policy-makers are concerned with providing women, and hence
their families, with opportunities to increase their welfare and
productivity, then the policy prescriptions must be different for each
group. In particular:
(a) for the upper-income/class group: more education and training
opportunities should be provided, especially in the scientific and
technical fields; and employers should be encouraged not to discriminate
against women in their hiring and firing practices;
(b) for the middle- and lower-middle income/class group: more
employment opportunities in culturally-sanctioned roles and working
conditions are needed: it is for this group in particular that supply
and demand are so inter-twined. The challenge is to provide access to
education and employment delivered in a culturally acceptable form,
without confining them to a "female ghetto" of low quality
education and employment. For example, given the cultural
"norms" for this group, it is essential to increase the number
of female service providers, not only to provide more employment
opportunities, but also for more girls to be educated, women to get
better health care, family planning services, credit, etc.; however, it
is difficult for many women to work in these jobs unless the environment
is fairly "respectable". If women are to acquire human
capital, and access to productive inputs and services, this
"vicious circle" must be broken; and
(c) for the lower-income/class group: raising their productivity is
more important than raising their employment, however, their
productivity is also dependent on their access to productive inputs and
services (e.g. extension, credit, new inputs and technology), which in
turn increases with more employment of women as service providers. It is
also important that such productivity-enhancing inputs and services be
geared to women's roles and needs: for example, inputs and training
for them in agriculture and micro-enterprises; group guarantees instead
of assets as collateral for credit, combined with "outreach"
services, etc.
It is thus clear that a key strategy for increasing the education,
employment and productivity of women in the middle and lower groups
(where the majority of the population are concentrated) is to provide
appropriate training, incentives and working conditions for female
service-providers, especially in rural areas, in order to break the
"vicious circle".
Ann Duncan
British Embassy, Islamabad.
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Shahnaz Kazi is Chief of Research and Bilquess Raza is Staff
Economist at the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.