Labour
branch Self-employment rate: women
As a percentage of total employment by gender
  2008
Turkey 46.8   46.80 
Mexico 34.7   34.70 
Greece 30.9   30.90 
Korea 30.4   30.40 
Brazil 30.0   30.00 
Chile 28.9   28.90 
Portugal 22.4   22.40 
Poland 20.4   20.40 
Italy 19.3   19.30 
Spain 13.3   13.30 
OECD total 13.0   13.00 
New Zealand 12.7   12.70 
EU27 total 12.5   12.50 
Japan 12.4   12.40 
Austria 11.5   11.50 
Slovenia 11.3   11.30 
Belgium 10.8   10.80 
Czech Republic 10.6   10.60 
Switzerland 10.4   10.40 
Netherlands 10.1   10.10 
Australia 8.9   8.90 
Germany 8.9   8.90 
Finland 8.6   8.60 
Hungary 8.6   8.60 
United Kingdom 8.2   8.20 
Israel 8.2   8.20 
Canada 7.8   7.80 
Slovak Republic 7.8   7.80 
Ireland 7.5   7.50 
Iceland 7.4   7.40 
Russian Federation 6.7   6.70 
France 6.2   6.20 
Sweden 5.9   5.90 
United States 5.6   5.60 
Denmark 5.1   5.10 
Estonia 4.9   4.90 
Luxembourg 4.7   4.70 
Norway 4.5   4.50 

Definition

Employment is generally measured through household labour force surveys. According to the ILO Guidelines, employed persons are defined as those aged 15 or over who report that they have worked in gainful employment for at least one hour in the previous week.

Self-employed persons include employers, own-account workers, members of producers' co-operatives, and unpaid family workers. People in the last of these groups do not have a formal contract to receive a fixed amount of income at regular intervals, but they share in the income generated by the enterprise; unpaid family workers are particularly important in farming and retail trade. Note that all persons who work in corporate enterprises, including company directors, are considered to be employees.

The rates shown here are the percentages of the self-employed in total civilian employment i.e. total employment less military employees.


For more statistics on economic, environmental and social issues visit online the OECD Factbook 2010.