Children in employment, study and work, male (% of male children in employment, ages 7-14) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Children in employment refer to children involved in economic activity for at least one hour in the reference week of the survey. Study and work refer to children attending school in combination with economic activity.

Source: Understanding Children's Work project based on data from ILO, UNICEF and the World Bank.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Eswatini 96.95 2010
2 Algeria 95.95 2013
3 Gabon 95.75 2012
4 South Africa 95.30 1999
5 Congo 95.20 2012
6 Uganda 92.82 2012
7 Dem. Rep. Congo 92.61 2014
8 Malawi 92.50 2015
9 Tunisia 89.10 2012
10 Togo 88.46 2014
11 Cameroon 87.70 2011
12 Namibia 87.66 1999
13 Ghana 87.31 2012
14 Zimbabwe 87.20 1999
15 Central African Republic 82.87 2010
16 Mozambique 82.70 2008
17 Burundi 81.96 2010
18 Zambia 81.21 2008
19 Nigeria 79.54 2011
20 Liberia 77.68 2010
21 Sudan 77.58 2014
22 Guinea-Bissau 77.33 2014
23 Lesotho 76.45 2000
24 Angola 75.30 2001
25 Rwanda 75.00 2014
26 Sierra Leone 71.90 2013
27 Benin 71.20 2012
28 Tanzania 69.34 2014
29 Kenya 66.84 2009
30 Côte d'Ivoire 64.81 2012
31 Ethiopia 64.55 2011
32 Madagascar 57.00 2007
33 Chad 56.09 2015
34 Guinea 54.90 2012
35 Mauritania 54.77 2011
36 Somalia 53.90 2006
37 Senegal 52.29 2015
38 Niger 49.60 2012
39 Egypt 48.00 2009
40 Mali 46.10 2013
41 Burkina Faso 44.38 2010
42 The Gambia 42.84 2015
43 Morocco 9.50 1999

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Development Relevance: In most countries more boys are involved in employment, or the gender difference is small. However, girls are often more present in hidden or underreported forms of employment such as domestic service, and in almost all societies girls bear greater responsibility for household chores in their own homes, work that lies outside the System of National Accounts production boundary and is thus not considered in estimates of children's employment.

Limitations and Exceptions: Although efforts are made to harmonize the definition of employment and the questions on employment in survey questionnaires, significant differences remain in the survey instruments that collect data on children in employment and in the sampling design underlying the surveys. Differences exist not only across different household surveys in the same country but also across the same type of survey carried out in different countries, so estimates of working children are not fully comparable across countries. For detailed source information, see footnotes at each data point.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data are from household surveys by the International Labor Organization (ILO), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), the World Bank, and national statistical offices. The surveys yield data on education, employment, health, expenditure, and consumption indicators related to children's work. Since children's work is captured in the sense of "economic activity," the data refer to children in employment, a broader concept than child labor (see ILO 2009a for details on this distinction). Household survey data generally include information on work type - for example, whether a child is working for payment in cash or in kind or is involved in unpaid work, working for someone who is not a member of the household, or involved in any type of family work (on the farm or in a business). In line with the definition of economic activity adopted by the 13th International Conference of Labour Statisticians, the threshold set by the 1993 UN System of National Accounts for classifying a person as employed is to have been engaged at least one hour in any activity relating to the production of goods and services during the reference period. Children seeking work are thus excluded. Economic activity covers all market production and certain nonmarket production, including production of goods for own use. It excludes unpaid household services (commonly called "household chores") - that is, the production of domestic and personal services by household members for a household's own consumption. Country surveys define the ages for child labor as 5-17. The data here have been recalculated to present statistics for children ages 7-14.

Periodicity: Annual