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Recognise value of informal labour sector in Hong Kong, says NGO

Operations director Mike Bird says those working in sector need better protection such as a minimum wage, days off and sick leave

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Kelly Zeng works in a little hawker stall in Tin Shui Wai to supplement family income. Photo: Nora Tam

It’s about time the contribution “the alternative economy” makes to society is recognised, an international NGO says.

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Opportunities in the same informal economy should be explored and expanded, according to the group, Women in Informal Employment: Globalising and Organising.

Whether as hawkers or housewives, helping out with the family store or waste collectors, more than half of the world’s jobs are informal, operations director Mike Bird said.

Bird was in Hong Kong to address a forum on labour at a time when the city’s fast ageing population has become a topic of concern. The workforce is set to steadily decline from 2018 onwards, according to Census and Statistics Department figures.

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In the past few years, the government has tried to increase the supply of labour by encouraging women to rejoin the workforce after childbirth, and calling on retirees to find a second career.

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