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Session 5: International Standard Classification of Status in Employment, 1993 (ICSE-93)

Session 5: International Standard Classification of Status in Employment, 1993 (ICSE-93). David Hunter International Labour Office Department of Statistics. Status in Employment. International Classification of Status in Employment (ICSE-93) Adopted at the Fifteenth ICLS in 1993

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Session 5: International Standard Classification of Status in Employment, 1993 (ICSE-93)

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  1. Session 5: International Standard Classification of Status in Employment, 1993 (ICSE-93) David Hunter International Labour Office Department of Statistics

  2. Status in Employment • International Classification of Status in Employment (ICSE-93) • Adopted at the Fifteenth ICLS in 1993 • Allows identification of: • Employees (paid employment jobs) • Self-employed (income depends solely on profits) • Employers • Own-account workers • Members of producers’ cooperatives • Contributing family workers • A critical variable to understand structure and functioning of labour market

  3. International Classification of Status in Employment (ICSE-93) • Groups are defined based on: • Type of economic risk • Strength of attachment between person and job • Type of authority over the establishment and other workers

  4. ICSE-93 – Key points in definitions of groups • Employees (including apprentices) • Some form of supervision • Agreement on the amount of payment in cash or kind • Employers • singly or jointly control the enterprise • have paid employees on a continuous basis • Own-account workers; • singly or jointly control the enterprise • no paid employees on a continuous basis • may have assistance from contributing family workers

  5. ICSE-93 – Key points in definitions of groups (2) • Members of producers’ cooperatives • jointly determine organization of work and distribution of profits • rare in many countries • Contributing family workers • unpaid • usually live in same household and are related to family members who control the enterprise • Workers not classifiable by status

  6. ICSE-93 – Optional categories, issues and problems • Subsistence workers • Owner managers of incorporated enterprises • Casual and seasonal workers and other forms of precarious employment • Outworkers • Home-based workers • Contractors

  7. Status in employment – data collection and measurement • 3 possible approaches • Combined with determination of activity status • NOT RECOMMENDED • Negative effect on accuracy of both topics • Status in employment should be asked only with reference to a specific job (the main job) • Combined with institutional sector • As a question on its own New developments in the measurement of economic characteristics using population censuses: Session 3, industry. occupation and status in employment

  8. Were you self-employed or working for someone else in your (main) job last week? • Self-employed • With paid help (employer) • Without paid help • Worked for someone else • As Government employee • As employee of a foreign Government • As employee of private company/person • As unpaid worker in family business/farm • Not stated New developments in the measurement of economic characteristics using population censuses: Session 3, industry. occupation and status in employment

  9. Status in employment – measurement issues • Questions need to use terms understood by enumerators and respondents • Owner managers of incorporated enterprises • Subsistence farmers • Does the question reflect national requirements? New developments in the measurement of economic characteristics using population censuses: Session 3, industry. occupation and status in employment

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