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<title>FAFO Report 151</title>

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<h3>Chapter 7</h3>
<H2>Employment and Under-utilization of Labour</H2>
<b>Geir&nbsp;&Oslash;vensen</b><p>

<B>Labour Activity and Living Conditions</B><BR>
The purpose of this chapter is to investigate important aspects of the labour
activity of Palestinians residing in the occupied territories. Both the
present data and the limited space available have prohibited any exhaustive
account of this comprehensive subject. The aim is rather to provide an overview
of the situation, and draw attention to some topics which need further investigation.<BR>
The overall perspective applied is one of living conditions, which should
be understood as encompassing both material and non-material elements. Labour
activity directly and indirectly affects a long range of living condition
components. This chapter will, however, primarily deal with employment in
relation to household economic resources<a href="7_notes.html#1"><sup>1</sup></a>.

<P>
Labour activity, normally, is the most important source of household income.
It is often also more uniformly distributed than other income types. The
economic importance of employment is particularly great in economies without
extensive social welfare arrangements. When alternative sources of income
are scarce, lack of employment represents a serious threat to the material
welfare of households. In a living conditions perspective, particular attention
must thus be given to the nature and manifestations of underemployment<a href="7_notes.html#2"><sup>2</sup></a>.

<P>
This chapter is subdivided into two main parts. The first part will discuss
the nature and manifestations of certain types of under-utilization of labour
in the occupied territories. The second part will focus on the employed,
and their distribution over area, type and economic branch of work. A separate
discussion of female labour activity is also conducted in this section.<p>

<b>Labour Force Definitions</b>

<br>

For measurement of supply and utilization of labour in household surveys
the ILO has endorsed application of the so-called &quot;labour force framework&quot;.
This classification system uses standardized employment definitions to allow
for consistent cross-country comparison of data. A somewhat adapted version
of the labour force framework is used by FAFO to fit specific living conditions
requirements. The labour force framework system is also used in the annual
Israeli labour force surveys of the occupied territories. Figure 7.1 gives
an overview of the main categories used in the FAFO living conditions survey:

<P>
Based on a person's activities in the so-called &quot;determinant week&quot;
the labour force framework divides the population, 15 years or older, into
three exhaustive and mutually exclusive categories<a href="7_notes.html#3"><sup>3</sup></a>. &quot;Employed&quot;
(box Ia, Ib and Ic above) comprise all persons who worked at least one hour
in the reference week, or persons who were temporarily absent<a href="7_notes.html#4"><sup>4</sup></a>. &quot;Unemployed&quot;
(box II above) are persons who did not work even one hour, but who at the
same time actively sought work. Employed and unemployed persons together
make up the &quot;currently economic active population&quot; or &quot;labour
force&quot;. Persons 15 years or older who are not &quot;currently economic
active&quot; and persons outside the survey population together make up
the &quot;not in the labour force&quot; category (box III and IV above).
<p>

<i>Figure 7.1 Labour survey definitions used by FAFO</i><br>

<img src="bilder/71.gif">

<P>
Note that the concept of &quot;work&quot; does not refer to paid work or
work outside the home exclusively, as is commonly thought. Non-market activities
like unpaid work in family farms or business, and several types of home
production, are also included. Unpaid housework, like child care, cleaning,
washing and cooking are, however, generally not considered as work<a href="7_notes.html#5"><sup>5</sup></a>.

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<a href="_._.html"><img src="../../../../../../../sys/almashriq-bottom-line.gif"alt = "----------------" border= 0></a><p><pre>
<a href="../../../../../../../base/mailpage.html">al@mashriq</a>                       960715</pre>

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