Explanatory
Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
Total
Labor
Force
comprises people ages 15
and older who meet the International Labour
Organization definition of the economically active population: all people who
supply labor for the production of goods and services during a specified period.
It includes both the employed and the unemployed. While national practices vary
in the treatment of such groups as the armed forces and seasonal or part-time
workers, in general the labor force includes the armed forces, the unemployed,
and first-time job-seekers, but excludes homemakers and other unpaid caregivers
and workers in the informal sector.
Employment
comprise all persons above a specific age
who during a specified brief period, either one week or one day, were in the
following categories:
(1)paid
employment:
① at work:
persons who during the reference period performed some work for wage or salary,
in cash or in kind;
②
with a job but not at
work: persons who, having already worked in their present job, were temporarily
not at work during the reference period and had a formal attachment to their
job. This formal job attachment should be determined in the light of national
circumstance, according to one or more of the following criteria: 1) the
continued receipt of wage or salary; 2) an assurance of return to work following
the end of the contingency, or an agreement as to the data of return; 3) the
elapsed duration of absence from the job which, wherever relevant, may be that
duration for which workers can receive compensation benefits without obligations
to accept other jobs.
(2)self-employment:
①
at
work: person who during the reference period performed some work for profit or
family gain, in cash or in kind; ②
with an enterprise but not
at work: persons with an enterprise, which may be a business
enterprise,
a
farm or a service undertaking ,who were temporarily not at work during the
reference period for any specific reason..
Unemployment comprises all persons above a specified
age who during the reference period were: (1) Without works were not in paid
employment or self-employment; (2) Currently available for work were available
for paid employment or self-employment during the reference period; (3) Seeking
work had taken specific steps in a specified reference period to seek paid
employment or self-employment. The specific steps may include registration at a
pubic or private employment exchange; application to employers; checking at
worksites, farms, factory gates, market or other assembly places; placing or
answering newspaper advertisement; seeking assistance of friends or relatives;
looking for land, building, machinery or equipment to establish own enterprise;
arranging for financial resources; applying for permits and licenses,
etc.
Unemployment
Rate illustrates the relative
severity of unemployment. These rates are calculated by relating the number of
persons in the given group who are unemployed during the reference period
(usually a particular day or a given week) to the total of employed and
unemployed persons in the group at the same date.
Non-agriculture
Industries comprise
mainly economically active industries as follows: mining and
quarrying, manufacturing, electricity, gas and water, construction,
wholesale and retail trade and restaurants and hotels, transport, storage
and communication, financing, insurance, real estate and business services,
community, social and personal services. In some cases, these industries are
shown in only some parts of the industries i.e. representatives
industries.
Earnings relates to remuneration in cash
and in kind paid to employees, as a rule at regular intervals, for time worked
or work done together with remuneration for time not worked, such as for annual
vacation, other paid leave or holidays. Earnings exclude employers' contribution
in respect of their employees paid to social security and pension schemes and
also the benefits received by employees under these schemes. Earnings also
exclude severance and termination pay.
Wage
Rates should include basic
wages, cost-of-living allowances and other guaranteed and regularly paid
allowances, but exclude overtime payments, bonuses and gratuities, family
allowances and other social security payments made by employers. Extra gratia
payments in kind, supplementary to normal wage rates, are also
excluded.
Labour Cost
is the cost incurred by the employer in
the employment of labour. The statistical concept of
labour cost comprises remuneration for work performed,
payments in respect of time paid for but not worked, bonuses and gratuities, the
cost of food, drink and other payments in kind, cost of workers’ housing borne
by employers, employers’ social security expenditures, cost to the employer for
vocational training, welfare services and miscellaneous items, such as transport
of workers, work clothes and recruitment, together with taxes regarded as labour cost.
Compensation of
Employees comprises all payments by
producers of wages and salaries to their employees, in kind as well as in cash,
and of contributions in respect of their employees to social security and to
private pension, casualty insurance, life insurance and similar
schemes.