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Notes on the Workshop on Organising Workers in the
Informal Economy: 7 June 2004, Geneva
1. Introduction
The Meeting was opened by Kofi Asamoah, Deputy General Secretary of
the Trade Union Congress of Ghana who welcomed everyone.
He explained that this meeting was one of the outcomes of the
Conference on Organizing Workers in the Informal Economy, held in
Ahmedabad, India in December 2003. The Conference was attended by
trade unions and other organisations organising workers in the
informal economy.
The Conference asked the international organising committee of the
Conference to continue coordinating the network of organisations
organising workers in the informal economy. It gave the Committee
–
known as the International Coordinating Committee (ICC)- a mandate
to arrange this workshop whilst at this International Labour
Conference.
The purpose of the workshop is to :
¡¤ Explain and inform organisations about the Conference and
the work being carried out
¡¤ Invite organisations to join our network to combine our
efforts
¡¤ Share experiences and ideas on building organisation in
the informal economy
The Chair introduced the members of the ICC present in the workshop:
Kofi Asamoah, DGS, Trade Union Congress of Ghana
Renana Jhabvala, National Coordinator, SEWA, India
Pat Horn, StreetNet International, South Africa
Manali Shah, Vice President , SEWA, India
And noted other members not present:
Linus Ukamba, Nigeria Labour Congress
Rakawin Lee, Homenet Thailand
Guillermo Perez Herrera, ICFTU-ORIT
Workshop participants then introduced themselves.
2. ICC Presentation
Pat Horn gave an overview of the Conference in Ahmedabad. She
explained some of the programmes planned by the ICC for 2004-5.
The Conference provided an opportunity for unions and organisations
to share their experiences in organising workers in the informal
economy and to learn from each other. Despite the difficulties in
organising informal workers, it is being successfully done in many
countries. We would like others organising in the informal economy
to join us.
We will be working on the following programmes over 2004-5:
¡¤ We will organise a further Conference in December 2005 in
Ghana
¡¤ Prior to this there will be a series of regional workshops
¡¤ We are collecting and documenting information on
organisations in the informal economy and building a data base
through Wiego
¡¤ Wiego is also collecting and documenting information on
labour laws and other laws affecting workers and organisations in
the informal economy
¡¤ We will arrange exchange visits between unions/worker
organisations organising in the informal economy to learn from each
other.
¡¤ An education manual on organising in the informal economy
will be written and available for organisations.
3. Regional Presentations
3.1. Africa
Kofi Asamoah briefly spoke about the informal economy in Africa and
the challenges facing unions to organise workers in the informal
economy. It was necessary to protect the unprotected. Ghana TUC has
been actively organising informal economy workers since the early
1990s.
3.2. Asia
Renana Jhabvala explained the extent of the informal economy in
parts of Asia. For example, in India over 90% of workers are in the
informal economy and more than 50% in East Asia. She gave examples
of some organising successes:
In Nepal, Gefont has been instrumental in making sure self employed
workers have rights to organise under labour law.
In Bangladesh, homeworkers have been recognised as workers and their
union registered
In Hong Kong- there are active domestic worker unions
In Thailand – the Thai Workers Solidarity Committee brings
together
nine union centres which are organising in the informal economy
In the Philippines – many unions are organising in the informal
economy and there is an important organisation of informal economy
workers – namely Patambama
Some of the main issues for workers are:
¡¤ Recognition
¡¤ Social protection
¡¤ Cooperatives, markets and employment creation
3.3 Latin America
Jose de Valle from CROC spoke of regional meetings held in Mexico to
build solidarity and share experiences. In the Americas informal
workers are increasing a lot. Formal jobs are disappearing so
workers have to do informal work to survive.
CROC has created a federation specifically for informal workers.
This federation is within CROC, but has its own statutes and
congresses, and concludes agreements with government institutions.
It has one million members.
4. Open Discussion
Mexico
We started organising informal workers in 1982. We have succeeded in
obtaining social security for the workers, namely pensions. We also
have a law protecting informal economy workers – the only one of
its kind we believe. This could be used as a model for other unions
to work with.
Morocco
It is difficult to organise workers in the informal economy. It is
even difficult to organise those in the formal economy.
Transnational companies in Morocco are determined to keep unions out.
Unions generally do not see informal economy workers as an
interesting constituency. They have no power and there is no
provision for elections and representation. Forms of representation
need to be established so that unions take this task seriously. I do
not agree with the definition of informal economy workers as ¡°non
salaried¡± as there are many informal economy workers who do receive
a salary e.g. domestic workers.
Niger
Congratulations on this initiative. It is important that there is a
network of organisations organising workers in the informal economy
so that we all know what is happening. This can be done through e-
mail and the internet.
In Niger there was an ILO project on organising in the informal
economy which was quite successful. It included small catering
workers, street vendors etc.
We would be interested in an exchange of strategies and materials on
organising. We developed materials which we could share.
Chad
There are problems in Chad with rising unemployment. Street vendors,
tailors etc are not covered by the law.
Nigeria
This forum should try and build more partnerships such as with
governments, the ILO. All have concerns and face challenges around
the informal economy and we should work together to address these.
Last month we had a meeting with the government. We discovered that
we did not even have proper statistics.
In Nigeria there is a still a concentration by the ILO on the formal
sector. We need to build a programme around the informal economy.
Unions cannot claim to defend or represent workers if we do not
organise in the informal economy.
The issue though is what kind of approach we should adopt? The
suggestion for a manual is very good . We could use it to expose our
organisers to the issues of organising workers in the informal
economy.
Hong Kong
There is union for women Indonesian Migrant Workers (IMWU). Many
migrate to Hong Kong and are subjected to abuse and discrimination.
For example the wages received are not the same as other domestic
workers. The workers have organised themselves so they can promote
their interests and so that people respect them as workers. The
Union works with the trade union federation and NGOs.
Liberia
This is a very important topic. Most workers in the trade unions
lost their jobs and have moved into the informal sector. They need
documents on how to organise. We would like to be part of the
network and to share information.
OATUU (Mr Sunmonu – Secretary General)
Work done is appreciated. The formal and informal workers must
unite. We must:
¡¤ Make governments get rid of legal barriers to organising
informal workers
¡¤ Learn through sharing experiences. It is not the same
organising in the informal economy as it is in the formal. There is
much discrimination against workers in the informal economy.
OATUU will do everything to make ensure organisations of informal
and informal workers come together and to support organising in the
informal economy
Zambia
Data is important. The government and other stakeholders ignore the
informal economy- especially its contribution to the economy. We
have to double our efforts and show the importance of the sector. We
must encourage the formation of unions, organisations and
associations. We must know who they are.
Benin
We have been organising for 15 years in the informal economy. We
have had several problems with the authorities. It is difficult
because workers themselves often do not see the importance of
organising into unions. So we began by organising into a
professional association which later we turned into unions. We take
up individual cases; we act as mediators for migrant worker
problems. The support of unions is needed to get better protection
and to get more rights.
For taxi drivers the union has a social security scheme. The drivers
pay into the scheme and after six months they and their families are
covered. We use this achievement to organise. The scheme is
administered by public social security funds.
Training is very important for the workers and helps them to commit
to the organisation.
Workers have needs which may not necessarily be the same as those in
the formal economy. We need to carefully identify these needs to
organise around.
The workshop concluded at 15h40 with thanks to all present and to
the organisers.
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