[WATCH] 5% of the Kenyan Population are Online Workers, Reveals Latest 2021 Government Survey

The Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) has revealed that online workers in Kenya make up about 5% of the population with an average earning of $188 per month.

The study, titled ā€˜National Study on Digital and Digitally Enabled Work in Kenya,ā€™ also lists the following earnings according to hourly average pay as well as other payment mechanisms:

  • $18.16 is the hourly pay for online workers
  • $23.40 on a work basis
  • $68.50 on a weekly basis
  • $64.53 on a project basis

___________________________________________________________________

SEE ALSO: Kenyans Borrow $10.9 Million Daily from Fuliza, the Leading African Overdraft Service on a Mobile Money Wallet

___________________________________________________________________

The survey was conducted by Ajira Digital, an official government program put in place to help find employment opportunities for young Kenyans.

The program, run by KEPSA and funded by the Mastercard Foundation, says its overall aim is to make Kenya a freelance hub and a globalĀ destination for digital work by the year 2022.

According to Carole Kariuki, who is CEO of KEPSA, 63% of adults across Kenya are aware of the gig economy. Moreover, 29%, representing 7.3 million people, were aware of the Ajira Digital Program compared to 5.5 million (14%) in 2019.

The survey has also made several important findings about online employment:

  • 1,209,506 people (5% of the Kenyan population) are online workers
  • 402, 284 were female
  • 1,007,277 were between 18-35 years old

The report has done a further breakdown of online workers and their skills:

  • 461,253 digital marketers
  • 141,021 transcribers
  • 250,000 article writers
  • 76,291 software developers
  • 64,100 data scientists

Critically, the survey found:

  • 31% of people work online because of lack of formal employment
  • 21% prefer online work because it provides convenience and flexibility
  • 18% work online because it makes it possible to work part-time

Top 3 barriers identified that prevent people from working online are:

  • Expensive Internet costs (53% of respondents)
  • Lack of skills (52%)
  • Lack of access to WiFi or connectivity (21%)

For women, family barriers as primary caregivers, cultural barriers, and cyberbullying are some of the challenges of working online.

A recent survey by Chainalysis revealed that Kenya leads the world in P2P crypto trade. The latest report by KEPSA provides great insight into some of the reasons why this massive crypto adoption is taking place in the country.

___________________________________________________________________

RECOMMENDED READING: Blockchain is the Top Skill Companies Need Most in 2020, According to Latest LinkedIn Learning Study

___________________________________________________________________

Thank you for your support by helping us create content:

BTC address: 3CW75kjLYu7WpELdaqTv722vbobUswVtxT

____________________________________________________________________

Follow us onĀ TwitterĀ for latest posts and updates

Join and interact with ourĀ Telegram community

_____________________

Subscribe to the channel below to keep updated on latest news on video:

___________________________________________________________________



Source

Scroll to Top