Households’ Non-leisure Time Allocation for Children and Determinants of Child Labour in Punjab, Pakistan
Pakistan is one of those countries in Asia where incidence of child labour is very high. Children should not have to work, but the estimates of the Child Labour Survey 1996 show that there are 3.3 million working children between the ages of 5–14 years in Pakistan. Due to political, social and economic pressures, developing countries like Pakistan tend to react by enacting legislation which bans child labour. Countries which are now developed did the same thing when they successfully completed their industrialisation. Child labour is often harmful for the children, but there are situations where the alternatives to child labour may offer only deeper poverty both for the children and their families. Therefore, mishandling of this issue can make matters from bad to worse, for example, if legislation pushes children into even worse situations. The Government of Pakistan has enacted the Employment of Children Act of 1991 which has banned employment of children below the age of 14 years and their employment is now a cognisable offence under the Act punishable by imprisonment and fine.1 Such interventions can lead to reductions in the already limited choices available to the child. For example, this legislation may mean that the child can neither work nor go to school. To put it differently, this ban does not address market failures, for example, in the education market. Hence, to tackle this complex problem different policy instruments are required which address not only the aspects of market failures, but also distributional and efficiency considerations of such services. In handling the issue of child labour, the supply side factors which motivate households to allocate non-leisure time of their children can provide useful insights to address this complex problem.
Year of publication: |
1998
|
---|---|
Authors: | Burki, Abid A. ; Fasih, Tazeen |
Published in: |
The Pakistan Development Review. - Pakistan Institute of Development Economics. - Vol. 37.1998, 4, p. 899-914
|
Publisher: |
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Burki, Abid Aman, (1999)
-
Functional Literacy, Heterogeneity and the Returns to Schooling : Multi-Country Evidence
Fasih, Tazeen, (2013)
-
Analyzing The Impact of Legislation On Child Labor In Pakistan
Fasih, Tazeen, (2007)
- More ...