Gallup says business share stagnating as gender, urban-rural gaps persist in labour power
KARACHI:
Pakistan’s employment panorama expanded considerably over the previous 4 years, however a Gallup Pakistan evaluation of labour power participation in 2024–25, launched on Wednesday, highlights that a lot of this progress is concentrated in low-productivity and casual companies relatively than high-value business. This development raises issues in regards to the high quality, sustainability and long-term financial influence of job creation.
In response to the report, employment climbed from 67.3 million in 2020–21 to 79.7 million in 2024–25, including roughly 12.4 million staff to the labour power. Whereas this displays sturdy general job creation, the construction of employment tells a extra complicated story.
The companies sector emerged as the first driver of job progress, rising its share of whole employment from 37.2% to 39.9%, whereas agriculture’s share declined from 37.4% to 35.1%.
Arif Habib Restricted (AHL) economist Sana Tawfik famous that the Gallup survey knowledge displays gradual structural changes, with the companies sector now using near 40% of the workforce, agriculture round 35%, and business accounting for the remaining share.
Common month-to-month wages have elevated to roughly Rs39,000, suggesting some enchancment in earnings alongside job progress. Total, the figures painting a labour market that’s increasing and evolving, providing a gradual basis for insurance policies aimed toward enhancing productiveness, formalisation and inclusive financial growth, she stated.
In the meantime, business remained largely stagnant, with its share edging down barely from 25.4% to 24.9%, in line with the survey. Labour market dynamics additionally reveal persistent gender disparities. In a stark discovering, the report reveals girls stay closely concentrated in agriculture, with 61.4% of employed girls within the sector in comparison with 24.5% of males, who’re extra evenly distributed throughout commerce and companies. This alerts restricted entry for girls to formal and higher-productivity jobs.
JS International Senior Vice President Waqas Ghani stated the gender disparity inside this development is hanging. The ratio of employed girls to males displays a major imbalance, pointing to restricted employment alternatives for girls, particularly past rural and farm-based work. He emphasised the pressing want for broader and extra inclusive job creation throughout sectors.
The report additional reveals a widening city–rural divide, with rural economies nonetheless anchored in low-productivity agricultural work, whereas city areas see progress primarily in retail commerce, transport and different casual companies. Such patterns underline a labour market pushed extra by necessity and survival jobs than by structural transformation.
The survey underscores that whereas headline numbers counsel employment enlargement, the standard and resilience of jobs stay weak, with the economic system struggling to supply formal, expert and productivity-enhancing alternatives.
“The addition of 12.4 million staff factors to a powerful rebound in general employment. Nonetheless, a more in-depth have a look at the place these jobs are concentrated reveals deeper structural issues. Agriculture continues to stay a serious job-providing sector, particularly in rural areas, highlighting the economic system’s sluggish shift towards extra diversified and higher-productivity sectors,” Ghani added.
Analysts say the findings level to an pressing want for industrial progress, expertise growth and insurance policies that develop formal employment and girls’s participation to translate numerical positive factors into broad-based financial progress.
“A services-heavy economic system with out productiveness and industrial depth creates exercise, not prosperity,” remarked Si International CEO Noman Ahmed Stated. He cautioned that a lot of the companies progress sits in low-productivity and casual segments.
With out industrial deepening, know-how adoption and expertise modernisation, this shift is not going to translate into sustainable wage progress or export competitiveness. “Providers should be linked with high-value manufacturing, digital platforms and productivity-driven SMEs,” he emphasised.

