Self-employed, male (% of male employment) (modeled ILO estimate) - Country Ranking

Definition: Self-employed workers are those workers who, working on their own account or with one or a few partners or in cooperative, hold the type of jobs defined as a "self-employment jobs." i.e. jobs where the remuneration is directly dependent upon the profits derived from the goods and services produced. Self-employed workers include four sub-categories of employers, own-account workers, members of producers' cooperatives, and contributing family workers.

Source: International Labour Organization, ILOSTAT database. Data retrieved in September 2019.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Niger 92.72 2019
2 Central African Republic 90.10 2019
2 Somalia 90.10 2019
4 Equatorial Guinea 88.41 2019
5 Chad 87.29 2019
6 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 87.17 2019
7 Eritrea 86.20 2019
8 Madagascar 86.13 2019
9 Guinea 85.06 2019
10 Sierra Leone 84.70 2019
11 Burkina Faso 83.27 2019
12 Benin 82.53 2019
13 Ethiopia 82.03 2019
14 Guinea-Bissau 81.31 2019
15 Burundi 80.77 2019
16 Tanzania 80.30 2019
17 Afghanistan 79.67 2019
18 India 75.83 2019
19 Nigeria 75.28 2019
19 Mali 75.28 2019
21 Mozambique 74.62 2019
22 Uganda 71.66 2019
23 Dem. Rep. Congo 69.98 2019
24 Angola 69.67 2019
25 Lao PDR 68.18 2019
26 Liberia 67.00 2019
27 Cameroon 66.66 2019
27 Haiti 66.66 2019
29 Congo 66.22 2019
30 Vanuatu 66.14 2019
31 Bolivia 65.77 2019
32 Zambia 65.49 2019
33 Papua New Guinea 65.13 2019
34 Myanmar 64.95 2019
35 Ghana 64.71 2019
36 Bhutan 64.56 2019
37 The Gambia 64.26 2019
38 Togo 64.17 2019
39 Nepal 63.99 2019
40 Côte d'Ivoire 63.72 2019
41 Azerbaijan 63.24 2019
42 Timor-Leste 60.12 2019
43 Senegal 59.25 2019
44 Zimbabwe 57.64 2019
45 São Tomé and Principe 56.92 2019
46 Bangladesh 56.42 2019
47 Albania 55.79 2019
48 Malawi 55.71 2019
49 Rwanda 55.56 2019
50 Yemen 54.57 2019
51 Solomon Islands 53.92 2019
52 Pakistan 52.78 2019
53 Georgia 52.55 2019
54 Sudan 51.12 2019
54 Comoros 51.12 2019
56 Mongolia 51.04 2019
57 Peru 50.54 2019
58 Colombia 50.34 2019
59 Thailand 50.31 2019
60 Vietnam 50.08 2019
61 Dominican Republic 49.64 2019
62 Iran 48.00 2019
63 Honduras 47.48 2019
64 Indonesia 47.06 2019
65 Mauritania 47.01 2019
66 Tonga 46.44 2019
67 Morocco 45.89 2019
68 Ecuador 45.17 2019
69 Syrian Arab Republic 44.91 2019
70 Jamaica 44.67 2019
71 Lebanon 44.39 2019
72 Venezuela 44.07 2019
73 China 43.72 2019
74 Paraguay 43.00 2019
75 Sri Lanka 42.04 2019
76 Kenya 41.63 2019
77 Cambodia 41.26 2019
78 Panama 40.81 2019
79 Lesotho 40.36 2019
80 Libya 39.78 2019
81 Fiji 39.69 2019
82 Nicaragua 39.15 2019
83 Armenia 37.66 2019
84 Brazil 37.24 2019
85 Cuba 37.20 2019
86 Kyrgyz Republic 36.75 2019
87 Moldova 35.88 2019
88 Samoa 35.72 2019
89 Greece 35.71 2019
90 Guyana 34.77 2019
91 Belize 34.47 2019
92 Guatemala 34.44 2019
93 St. Lucia 34.24 2019
94 Uzbekistan 34.10 2019
95 Philippines 33.99 2019
96 Algeria 33.57 2019
97 Namibia 33.26 2019
98 El Salvador 33.15 2019
99 Mexico 31.43 2019
100 Gabon 31.25 2019
101 Uruguay 31.18 2019
102 Serbia 31.04 2019
103 Trinidad and Tobago 30.83 2019
104 Turkey 30.72 2019
105 Egypt 30.18 2019
106 Cabo Verde 29.67 2019
107 Eswatini 29.64 2019
108 Djibouti 29.56 2019
109 Turkmenistan 29.52 2019
110 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 29.30 2019
111 Argentina 28.81 2019
112 Tunisia 28.61 2019
113 Costa Rica 28.45 2019
114 Chile 28.25 2019
115 Tajikistan 27.06 2019
116 Italy 26.85 2019
117 Malaysia 26.55 2019
118 Korea 26.43 2019
119 Montenegro 26.25 2019
120 Romania 25.51 2019
121 Iraq 24.80 2019
122 Kazakhstan 24.44 2019
123 Bosnia and Herzegovina 24.24 2019
124 Puerto Rico 23.59 2019
125 North Macedonia 23.49 2019
126 Poland 23.47 2019
127 Mauritius 23.18 2019
128 The Bahamas 22.76 2019
129 Botswana 22.53 2019
130 Barbados 22.24 2019
131 New Zealand 22.12 2019
132 Portugal 20.68 2019
133 Czech Republic 20.40 2019
134 Australia 20.28 2019
135 Ireland 20.08 2019
136 Malta 19.74 2019
137 Netherlands 19.61 2019
138 United Kingdom 19.49 2019
139 Slovak Republic 19.31 2019
140 New Caledonia 19.00 2019
141 Spain 18.96 2019
142 South Africa 18.73 2019
143 Canada 18.22 2019
144 Belgium 17.30 2019
145 Ukraine 17.22 2019
146 Slovenia 17.02 2019
147 Finland 17.00 2019
148 Singapore 16.88 2019
149 Suriname 16.75 2019
150 Cyprus 16.30 2019
151 Jordan 16.24 2019
152 Switzerland 16.03 2019
153 Iceland 15.43 2019
154 France 15.28 2019
155 Croatia 15.07 2019
156 Israel 14.91 2019
157 Lithuania 14.84 2019
158 Estonia 14.61 2019
159 Austria 14.50 2019
160 Sweden 13.64 2019
161 Latvia 13.31 2019
162 Bulgaria 13.20 2019
163 Hungary 12.90 2019
164 Germany 11.89 2019
165 Hong Kong SAR, China 11.61 2019
166 Japan 11.35 2019
167 Denmark 10.99 2019
168 Luxembourg 9.62 2019
169 Russia 9.54 2019
170 Macao SAR, China 9.06 2019
171 Norway 8.52 2019
172 Brunei 7.76 2019
173 United States 6.96 2019
174 Belarus 5.76 2019
175 Saudi Arabia 5.11 2019
176 United Arab Emirates 4.80 2019
177 Oman 3.56 2019
178 Bahrain 2.59 2019
179 Kuwait 2.16 2019
180 Qatar 0.39 2019

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Development Relevance: Breaking down employment information by status in employment provides a statistical basis for describing workers' behaviour and conditions of work, and for defining an individual's socio-economic group. A high proportion of wage and salaried workers in a country can signify advanced economic development. If the proportion of own-account workers (self-employed without hired employees) is sizeable, it may be an indication of a large agriculture sector and low growth in the formal economy. A high proportion of contributing family workers — generally unpaid, although compensation might come indirectly in the form of family income — may indicate weak development, little job growth, and often a large rural economy. Each status group faces different economic risks, and contributing family workers and own-account workers are the most vulnerable - and therefore the most likely to fall into poverty. They are the least likely to have formal work arrangements, are the least likely to have social protection and safety nets to guard against economic shocks, and often are incapable of generating sufficient savings to offset these shocks.

Limitations and Exceptions: Data are drawn from labor force surveys and household surveys, supplemented by official estimates and censuses for a small group of countries. Due to differences in definitions and coverage across countries, there are limitations for comparing data across countries and over time even within a country. Estimates of women in employment are not comparable internationally, reflecting that demographic, social, legal, and cultural trends and norms determine whether women's activities are regarded as economic.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The indicator of status in employment distinguishes between two categories of the total employed. These are: (a) wage and salaried workers (also known as employees); and (b) self-employed workers. Self-employed group is broken down in the subcategories: self-employed workers with employees (employers), self-employed workers without employees (own-account workers), members of producers' cooperatives and contributing family workers (also known as unpaid family workers). Vulnerable employment refers to the sum of contributing family workers and own-account workers. The series is part of the ILO estimates and is harmonized to ensure comparability across countries and over time by accounting for differences in data source, scope of coverage, methodology, and other country-specific factors. The estimates are based mainly on nationally representative labor force surveys, with other sources (population censuses and nationally reported estimates) used only when no survey data are available.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual