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2022-03-31-accounts

WIEGO CAub31iZing￿Qrya￿ NNUAL REPORT PRIL2 ARCH 2022 .

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 2

03 04 Empowering Workers, The Year in Review Securing Informal Livelihoods

TABLE OF CONTENTS

07 10 Highlights on the Working to Ensure Road to 25 Millions of Workers Have a Seat at the Table

15 Where WIEGO Worked in 2021-2022

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How WIEGO Supports Domestic Workers

How WIEGO Supports Home-Based Workers

How WIEGO Supports Street Vendors and Market Traders

How WIEGO Supports Waste Pickers

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35 Financial Report: Year Ended 31 March 2022

Publications and Resources

06 WIEGO Celebrates 25 Years

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WIEGO’s Key Programmes

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How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams Support Workers in Informal Employment

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Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022

Empowering Workers, Securing Informal Livelihoods

WIEGO is a network of organizations of workers in informal employment and the researchers, statisticians and development practitioners who support them. WIEGO’s mission is to improve the working conditions of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy. We do this in two ways. First, we provide statistics, research and policy analysis on the informal economy. This information can be used for advocacy: Data in the hands of workers is power. Second, we find and link up individuals and workers’ organizations to build regional and global networks. We are building a social movement: Stronger together.

WIEGO works to:

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Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022

The Year in Review

Mirai Chatterjee, Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors

Dear WIEGO Family and Friends,

As we celebrate our 25th anniversary this year, we look toward the next quarter-century with hope and inspiration in the midst of ongoing challenges. While pandemic lockdowns have eased, food and fuel prices have skyrocketed; while workers are earning again, they have not overcome the effects of the COVID-19 crisis. Conflict and climate change are with us as never before. Yet we continue to pursue our vision of a just recovery for all workers: one in which all workers are included and central to government and other efforts at rebuilding livelihoods with social protection, and central to rebuilding local and national economies.

When this financial year started in April 2021, my country, India, was experiencing a public health crisis of unimaginable proportions. The women worker leaders who stepped in to deliver food and medicine, to comfort others in moments of loss, to mobilize their collectives by any means to do what they could for their members showed why societies must learn to value women workers and prioritize their voices. There will be no recovery otherwise.

A quarter-century ago when WIEGO was founded, very few people took notice of the informal economy. We have come a long way since then. This year, we saw our worker-leaders featured in major media outlets

and invited to speak to policy audiences all over the world. Our network members have come together to define joint policy positions and have seen their uptake. There is more awareness of the need for universal social protection and its particular importance to workers in informal employment. The mobilization among WIEGO Network members for the International Labour Conference (ILC) General Discussion on Social Protection is yet another significant step forward in our struggle for rights, recognition and representation. We have made tangible progress since the onset of the crisis, and we are getting stronger and better every day.

As we begin to see more of each other in person again, we are grateful for the bonds we share. Soon, we will gather together at our eighth General Assembly to affirm our strategic direction and commitment to the mission we share. We look forward to this moment of renewal and celebration, and to deepening the connections with all of our members, partners and allies.

Mirai Chatterjee Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors October 2022

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Sally Roever, International Coordinator

After responding to the urgent needs of workers and their organizations, we have settled into new ways of working and sharpened our focus on centring the voices of workers in economic recovery debates. The increasing visibility of our Network in those debates has helped shift ground in a significant way, at an important moment.

Our Network brought a united voice to discussions on social protection at the International Labour Conference, calling for direct representation of organizations of workers in informal employment and highlighting the needs of self-employed workers. Advocacy and direct interventions on the part of our Network’s representatives resulted in an outcome document that names workers in informal employment and will shape global work on social protection for years to come. Other strategic interventions on social protection followed later in the year, including a project challenging economic orthodoxies that undermine universal social protection.

Pandemic response work that we began last year with members and partners culminated in the dissemination of relevant, timely data on COVID-19’s impact on different sectors of informal employment. As the pandemic’s effects evolved in different ways around the world, our research traced the impact pathways for different worker groups, showing how workers coped with livelihood loss and displacement – and identifying their priorities for recovery. The findings have been used in dialogue forums to inform government recovery approaches.

In November, the WIEGO Network’s relevance to the future of work was recognized through a five-year, USD25 million grant from the Ford Foundation. The grant will build sustainability across the movement as WIEGO and the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers solidify governance structures, build capacity on critical functions, and strategically support affiliates. The growth and strengthening across our networks are evident as we expand our voice in global spaces that shape the possibilities for a just future of work. One of many examples came in March, when our efforts to support waste pickers resulted in a UN environmental resolution mentioning informal recyclers for the first time.

In the background of this work was an internal strategic review process to inform our next five-year plan. We defined eight strategy-level questions related to scope and orientation, which helped us explore and define WIEGO’s priorities. Our in-depth consultation process drew on perspectives from our team, Board, institutional and individual members, and external stakeholders. The resulting five-year strategic plans will be reviewed at our eighth General Assembly, to take place in Mexico in November 2022.

We are, as ever, so grateful for our team, members, partners and allies in the struggle for a just and inclusive world of work.

In Solidarity,

Sally Roever, Ph.D. International Coordinator, WIEGO October 2022

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WIEGO Celebrates 25 Years

The year before WIEGO’s 1997 formation, the ILO Convention on Home Work (C177) was passed, and this milestone sowed the seeds for WIEGO’s birth. The statistics that contributed to the advocacy process at the global level were provided by founders who still play key roles in WIEGO’s research work.

While WIEGO today far exceeds the expectations of our founders, the mutual support that heralded our foundation has been there from the beginning. The home-based worker movement, through the SelfEmployed Women’s Association (SEWA), was crucial to our formation. The WIEGO Network has grown from the 10 specialists on the informal economy who came together in 1997 into a movement that embraces WIEGO, the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers. WIEGO is now a 74-person team, and our Network’s institutional members represent more than 5 million people in 94 countries. Direct WIEGO activities take place in close to 60 countries across six continents.

The founding group constituted:

The specialists shared a common concern in 1997: that official statistics do not represent and mainstream policymakers do not adequately understand the contribution of workers in informal employment, especially women workers, to national economies. As a result, little attention was paid to how policies affect women workers or how their situation could be improved. The group planned a collaborative project that would promote a better understanding and appreciation of women in informal employment. The project’s goals were to promote better statistical accounting and research, stronger organizations and networks, and supportive policies and programmes for women in informal employment. The founders named the project “Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing” (or WIEGO for short).

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Highlights on the Road to 25

Here are some of the global-level highlights along the way to 25 years and, for a fuller picture including national and regional organizing milestones and victories, - - see www.wiego.org/news/wiego turns 25.

1997 WIEGO Founded

In April 1997, a group of 10 specialists on the informal economy – organizers, researchers, statisticians and practitioners – met to plan a collaborative project in support of women workers in the informal economy.

2002

StreetNet International Founded, Informal Employment Statistics Published by WIEGO and ILO

StreetNet International was founded in South Africa, with support from SEWA and WIEGO. Through its Constitution, StreetNet International ensures that women vendors are represented in all leadership structures. Also in 2002, WIEGO and the ILO collaborated to publish Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture , which compiled available national data on informal employment for the first time.

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2003

2009

2011

2013

Organizing Workers Global Study on the Impact of Convention 189 on Decent Work International Domestic Workers’ in Informal Employment the Economic Crisis on Workers for Domestic Workers Adopted Federation Founded

WIEGO and a coalition of trade unions and organizations, including the Ghana Trades Union Congress, HomeNet Thailand, the Nigerian Labour Congress, SEWA and StreetNet International, met in Ahmedabad, India, to discuss organizing workers in informal employment. WIEGO subsequently supported the convening of global conferences to organize waste pickers, domestic workers and home-based workers in 2008, 2011 and 2015, respectively.

In 2009 and 2010, WIEGO led a study of the impact of the global economic crisis on urban workers, carried out by organizations of workers in informal employment in a dozen cities across low and middle-income countries. Drawing on this experience, WIEGO led another global study across 12 cities in 2020–2021 to understand the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on workers in informal employment.

In June 2011, after a five-year campaign, the International Labour Conference adopted Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers. The Convention mandates that domestic workers be recognized as workers entitled to the same protections as other workers.

In October 2013, the International Domestic Workers’ Network was transformed into a formal federation at its founding congress in Uruguay. At the congress, WIEGO facilitated the ratification of the Constitution and the election of the leadership.

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2015

2018

2021

2022

ILO Recommendation 204 First Global Estimates of Launch of Waste Pickers Recognized in on Formalization Adopted Informal Employment Published HomeNet International UN Environmental Resolution

The landmark ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy contains many provisions that leaders of workers in informal employment and WIEGO advocated for over three years. These included provisions recognizing that informal livelihoods should be preserved during the transition to formality, and that workers in informal employment need regulated access to public space and to natural resources to pursue their livelihoods.

WIEGO’s Statistics Programme worked with the International Labour Organization as it compiled the first-ever global estimates of informal employment. In 2018, the research was published by the ILO in Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture (3rd edition) and summarized in WIEGO’s Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Brief .

The February 2021 launch of HomeNet International was the culmination of two decades of organization building. Homebased workers’ organizations from four regions continued to build a democratic, representative global network through the COVID-19 pandemic. WIEGO supported the network’s formation with capacity building, knowledge generation, statistics and networking.

Informal recyclers were mentioned for the first time in a United Nations environmental resolution, in the fifth session of the UN Environment Assembly in Kenya, February 28–March 2, 2022. The text says their contribution in collecting, sorting and recycling plastics in many countries is recognized, and it further calls for learning from the best practices in informal and cooperative settings.

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Working to Ensure a Seat at the Table for Millions of Workers On November 16, 2021, the Ford Foundation announced a five-year USD25 million grant to the WIEGO Network. An interactive Guardian Labs article, “More Than 2 Billion Workers Make Up the Informal Economy,” accompanied the announcement to highlight the size and significance of the informal economy and to raise the visibility of the membership-based organizations fighting for improved livelihoods for workers in informal employment. News of the funding announcement was covered by TIME, Fast Company and other news outlets.

Sarita Gupta, director of the Ford Foundation’s Future of Work(ers) programme, said:

“We know there can be no global recovery without informal workers. This grant recognizes the importance of ensuring billions of informal workers have a seat at the table to have their voices, demands and needs heard at the national and global levels, so policymakers and business leaders recognize their contributions and value.”

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HomeNet International Celebrates its First Anniversary

Home-based workers and their allies launched a global network in February 2021. As it marked its first anniversary this year, HomeNet International officially registered as an observer at the 110th Session of the International Labour Conference. This marks a milestone in securing home-based workers’ ability to speak for and represent themselves at the ILC, and for visibility of the sector among governments, unions and employers attending the conference.

The global network of home-based workers is working with WIEGO to develop statistical briefs on countries outside Asia. There is a focus on other regions because the regional network is strong and visible, particularly in South Asia. HomeNet International and WIEGO believe that bringing visibility to home-based work in other regions will help the network build solidarity within the movement.

While the will to form a global movement is decades old and the work towards it many years in the making, HomeNet International’s ability to celebrate an anniversary was never taken for granted. As HNI’s International Coordinator Janhavi Dave told us, there was an international network of home-based workers 25 years ago, but it “didn’t succeed. Unfortunately, it wasn’t very democratic, and many of our sister organizations walked out of it.”

It is very different this time, Janhavi said. “We’re all part of the same family. Be it SEWA, be it HomeNet South Asia, now HomeNet International, WIEGO, all of us have worked together to build this movement and push the movement forward. This partnership that we built – and the process that we built it with – is a very democratic one.”

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Women Fighting the Same Fight

Janhavi’s sentiments are echoed by the other leaders of global organizations that WIEGO works with. Elizabeth Tang, General Secretary of IDWF, told us: “Being part of the WIEGO Network, we know we are in a much larger movement – a much larger family of informal workers, who are women, who are fighting the same fight for recognition, for rights, for social protection. We are together with home-based workers, street vendors, waste pickers.”

StreetNet International Coordinator Oksana Abboud said that “WIEGO has connected us with like-minded organizations and institutions, providing the space for building international solidarity among all workers engaged in informal employment. We use WIEGO’s research and databases in our advocacy work.”

Kabir Arora, who coordinates the Alliance of Indian Waste Pickers and supports the outreach of the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers in Asia, described the moment that Soledad Mella, President of the Asociación Nacional de Recicladores de Chile and Global Alliance of Waste Pickers representative, took the podium at the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA5.2) in Nairobi, Kenya, in February 2022: “We did what we had come for and represented the hopes and aspirations of millions of waste pickers.”

Cross-Sector Work Grows

While the work of WIEGO’s programmes to support different sectors of workers in the informal economy are highlighted in this report, our work increasingly reaches across sectors and this is building solidarity among all workers in informal employment.

For example, the Statistics Programme at WIEGO has continuously compiled data to show the large number of workers in informal employment across sectors and countries. Data in the hands of workers has helped to build unity and solidarity. Through an ongoing regional collaboration in Arab countries supported by the Ford Foundation, WIEGO, the ILO, the ILO-MENA regional office and UNESCWA are developing labour statistics with a focus on informality. In 2021, a project report assessed the labour force surveys and the social protection programmes related to employment in the pilot countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and Tunisia) as a basis for developing a questionnaire for labour force surveys. Qualitative and quantitative testing of the questionnaire will be next. The project contributes to improving statistics on informality and on the main groups of workers of concern to WIEGO. The project also facilitates the region’s contribution to the ILO Working Group for the Revision of Statistical Standards on Informality, of which WIEGO’s Statistics team are members.

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In another show of cross-sectoral unity and solidarity, the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers, HomeNet International, IDWF and StreetNet International participated in the 109th Session of the International Labour Conference in June 2021, along with WIEGO and SEWA. The main aim of this group was to guarantee that social protection needs of workers in informal employment were reflected in the adopted conclusions of the discussion.

Also, WIEGO is working with Swedish Sida to develop research that deepens the link between social protection and economic recovery and brings new evidence to bear on longstanding debates. Three relationships in particular are being explored: the contribution of social spending to economic recovery, the link between social protection and labour market

dynamics, and the role for capital and employers in the financing of social protection. Additionally, with the International Centre for Tax and Development (ICTD), the project explores the realities of taxation from the perspective of workers in informal employment.

The launch of the inaugural WIEGO School this year is the exciting outcome of a longstanding process. The School is a major milestone, drawing together the sectors as well as our programmes, and our allies are enthusiastic about its potential. As Oksana told us, “WIEGO has so much expertise and can train on how to organize and how to negotiate for those in informal employment. At the same time, we will draw closer together for the sake of our joint constituency, which is informally employed workers.”

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Seizing the Moment from COVID-19

The majority of the global workforce – 61 per cent – is informal and has been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and by the accompanying economic downturn. We are seizing the moment as the global community considers how to rebuild a more equitable and fair world.

WIEGO, alongside membership-based organizations of the working poor, monitored the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on workers in informal employment around the world. In mid-2021, interviews were conducted with the same domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and market traders, and waste pickers in 11 cities as in the mid-2020 surveys to assess if they had recovered. We talked to workers in Accra (Ghana), Ahmedabad (India), Bangkok (Thailand), Dakar (Senegal), Delhi

(India), Durban (South Africa), Lima (Peru), Mexico City (Mexico), Pleven (Bulgaria), New York City (USA) and Tiruppur (India). Seventy per cent of the study respondents were women, broadly reflecting the gender composition of the four sectors. The 2021 fndings suggest that the economic fallout of the COVID-19 crisis remains deep and persistent for workers at the base of the economy. The level of indebtedness that workers have been forced into means the COVID-19 crisis is far from over. Since the pandemic began, 52 per cent of respondents drew down on their savings, 46 per cent borrowed money, and 17 per cent sold or pawned assets to get by. The vast majority (82 per cent) of respondents who had drawn down on savings since the beginning of the pandemic were unable to replace any of the savings by mid-2021. WIEGO has drawn lessons from the pandemic and, with our allies, is continuing advocacy work for a just economic recovery with renewed vigour.

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Where WIEGO Worked in 2021-2022*

•Argentina •Indonesia
•Bangladesh •Jordan
•Brazil •Kenya
•Bulgaria •Laos
•Cambodia •Lebanon
•Canada •Malawi
•Chile •Mexico
•Colombia •Morocco
•Costa Rica •Nepal
•Democratic Republic of •Nicaragua
the Congo •Niger
•Dominican Republic •Pakistan
•Ecuador •Panama
•El Salvador •Paraguay
•Ethiopia •Peru
•France •Senegal
•Germany •Sierra Leone
•Ghana •South Africa
•Guatemala •Spain
•Honduras •Tanzania
•India •Thailand

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WIEGO’s Key Programmes

Statistics Programme

The Statistics Programme collaborates with official statisticians to improve statistical methods that will make visible the size and significance of the informal economy and the situation of all informal workers, and to prepare the data in formats that are accessible to a wide set of users.

Organization and Representation Programme

The Organization & Representation Programme helps organizations of workers in informal employment build their organizational and leadership capacity, connect to each other and align with allies as they fight to improve the working conditions of their members.

Social Protection Programme

Workers in informal employment need access to social protections that will protect and mitigate risks to their incomes and help them cope after an event or shock. The Social Protection Programme is committed to helping workers in informal employment access these rights.

Urban Policies Programme

By working with leaders of workers in informal employment, policymakers and urban practitioners, the Urban Policies Programme strives to help the urban poor achieve better incomes, more secure places to live and work, and the capacity to negotiate sustainable gains in urban policies and practices.

Law Programme

The Law Programme strives for the recognition, inclusion and protection of the rights and work of workers in informal employment in international instruments, national and local laws and regulations. It works to build the capacity of workers in informal employment and their organizations to use the law to fight for secure livelihoods and labour rights.

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How WIEGO Supports Domestic Workers

Meet Norma Palacios

Norma is one of the founders and leaders of SINACTRAHO, a domestic workers’ union in Mexico. She has been a domestic worker for 27 years and, while she recognizes that she is tired and “has fears, like any other human being,” she finds strength in this movement.

SINACTRAHO works to raise awareness of domestic workers’ economic and labour situation and strives to empower its members to demand and exercise their rights as workers.

“Most of the time you work in a place where the employer’s house is your workplace, but you can be alone all day long and you have no contact with other people with whom you identify. We do see that these relationships can develop when, perhaps, they work in the same building, when they establish a friendship, but we see that when they come to the union they become stronger.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the historic effort to ensure domestic workers’ long-term well-being became even more pressing. As well as advocating for social security, the union offered legal counselling to domestic workers who faced exploitative employment relations or were fired without justification during the crisis.

“Doing all these things during the pandemic showed us that we can achieve everything. It also strengthened me a lot: when we have these encounters with authorities I know we carry with us the voice of us as domestic workers […] We have to hold on to all these women to move forward.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Domestic Workers

Organization and Representation Programme

After developing a toolkit on Convention 189, WIEGO facilitated negotiation skills training for domestic worker organizations. Experiences from this were shared by IDWF affiliates in a November 2021 workshop with the ILO commemorating C189. Beginning in October 2021, IDWF affiliates from 10 African countries took part in a six-month-long WIEGO online training on democratic leadership in trade unions. Participants said the course helped them to realize the importance of understanding and implementing their unions’ constitutions and to revise them appropriately to address the situation of domestic workers.

Statistics Programme

The Statistics Programme’s unique contribution is to improve the identification of domestic workers – and home-based workers, street vendors, market traders and waste pickers – in official statistics and to prepare statistics on these groups in accessible formats for use by membership-based organizations (MBOs), global networks of workers in informal employment, and allied policy advocates. International statistics work makes possible global statistical briefs such as the ILO-WIEGO-IDWF profle on domestic workers. It also informs WIEGO’s preparation of briefs at the national, urban and city levels on informal employment. Briefs for Chile and Senegal include trend information on each group, including domestic workers, and facilitate work to improve the situation of these workers.

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Law Programme

With the aim of legally empowering domestic workers so that they can realize their rights and respond to violations by employers, WIEGO held meetings this year with workers’ organizations in Tanzania and South Africa. Domestic workers’ struggles include limited legal awareness and access to legal services, uneven legal protection, non-compliance by employers, difficulty in organizing, and poor enforcement. WIEGO’s legal empowerment work aims to train domestic workers on legal issues, thereby increasing their access to justice. By empowering domestic workers themselves to know and use the law – equipping them with legal knowledge, and negotiation and mediation skills – the work aims to break the barriers to access to justice, including the hierarchical relationship between legal professionals and workers that can prevent the latter from seeking redress. Ultimately, the work with IDWF affiliates will embed, through a training-of-trainers model, a culture of legal empowerment in their organizations so that all members are able to know, use and shape the law to secure their rights.

Social Protection Programme

With the IDWF, WIEGO produced a series of policy briefs on domestic workers and social protection in South Asia. These looked at the barriers domestic workers face in accessing social protection and public services, as well as the costs they carry in order to access these services. For example, domestic workers in India said they were paying the equivalent of three weeks of earnings to visit a health care centre. About 70 per cent of workers reported having to take out a loan to finance their last health visit. In Tamil Nadu, domestic workers said they lack knowledge about their entitlements, lack documentation for registration, and migrant workers are excluded from welfare provisions. The cost of applying for a social security benefit for the typical domestic worker in our survey was 1.5 times her weekly earnings. Domestic worker organizations in South Asia are using this research in their local-level organizing and advocacy.

Urban Policies Programme

WIEGO’s COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study monitored workers’ hardships, loss of jobs and inability to recover earnings by mid2021. The study found that, among domestic workers, “live-out” domestic workers were more likely to lose their jobs and struggle to regain them, whereas “live-in” workers experienced deteriorating working conditions. Both types of domestic workers reported a weakening of their bargaining power with employers. In Mexico City, SINACTRAHO, the national union of domestic workers, used study results on food insecurity and loss of income to engage the Mexican Congress on the long-standing demands of domestic workers.

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How WIEGO Supports Home-Based Workers

Meet Janhavi Dave

“The home-based workers’ movement has had many proud moments,” says Janhavi, International Coordinator of HomeNet International, which was launched in February 2021.

One such moment came in 1996, when the ILO Convention on Home Work (C177) was passed. “WIEGO really supported in achieving this Convention – getting the statistics to push the advocacy process at a global level, which was extremely fruitful.” WIEGO’s commitment to supporting the home-based workers’ movement has continued ever since.

The COVID-19 crisis saw the expansion of the home-based worker sector, in numbers as well as regions and the sectors in which they work, Janhavi said, noting that shortly before the pandemic, a WIEGO study found there were 260 million home-based workers in the world.

“What is being spoken about right now is that this number has almost doubled. Everybody talked about the traditional home-based workers – the artisans or the women who embroider and make baskets and sew – but now people are talking about home-based workers in all sectors, including gig work, telemarketing and online marketing.”

While the home-based worker sector is very likely to expand over the next few decades, its visibility will not grow with it, Janhavi said. But there is an encouraging trend in that trade unions are becoming more interested in this kind of informal work.

“I see many of us joining hands and working together in organizing home-based workers.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Home-Based Workers

Organization and Representation Programme

WIEGO continues to support HNI’s governance body and several homebased worker initiatives in Africa and Latin America. The Africa Regional Platform of home-based worker organizations is making progress towards adopting a constitution, and COTRADO ALAC – a regional network in the Latin American and Caribbean region – is in the process of becoming a registered organization. The Organization & Representation Programme supports these regional processes as well as home-based worker organization activities in five Latin American countries and five African countries.

Statistics Programme

In collaboration with HomeNet South Asia, the Statistics Programme prepared a statistical brief on Nepal this year to complete a series of four home-based worker briefs that also include Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. We also prepared briefs at the national, urban and city levels on home-based workers and other groups for Chile and Senegal. Until now, Senegal had few publications on informal employment. Also, significant progress was made on briefs for Brazil and Peru (on home-based workers, domestic workers, market traders, street vendors and waste pickers) with national, city and urban data.

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Law Programme

Advocating for the inclusion of homeworkers in supply chain legislation was a key priority for WIEGO in 2021, and the European Commission’s publication of a draft directive on corporate sustainability due diligence was cause for celebration. The draft directive, published in February 2022, has the potential to cover all workers in the supply chain, and made homeworker organizations feel that they had at last been heard. Civil society partners are now in the second phase of advocacy as the final instrument is negotiated.

Social Protection Programme

Urban Policies Programme

A central focus for the Urban Policies Programme is shaping economic recovery debates and foregrounding the needs of workers in informal employment through rigorous research. Worker-organization partners in the WIEGO-led COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study used the process as well as the results to better respond to their members’ needs. In Bangkok, HomeNet Thailand’s fieldwork revealed urgent concerns and launched a comprehensive set of recovery demands, a crowd-sourcing campaign and a health hotline. With a focus on home as workplace, WIEGO is working with HomeNet International and its affiliates to support their advocacy for housing tenure, mixed-use zoning and basic infrastructure services.

In response to rising demand, WIEGO has been developing worker education materials on social protection. The Social Protection Programme developed materials for HomeNet International and ran a training series for its affiliates in Asia, Africa and Latin America that fed into HNI’s strategy development on social protection. The programme also supported HomeNet Southeast Asia’s piloting of a course originally developed by the Asia Resource Monitoring Centre (AMRC). These experiences will bolster a broader set of worker education resources for the WIEGO School. WIEGO has also been working with HomeNet Southeast Asia, and in conversation with StreetNet International, to build a strong relationship with the Senior Labour Officials Meeting of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), and the group has confirmed participation in HomeNet Southeast Asia’s regional dialogue on social protection.

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How WIEGO Supports Street Vendors and Market Traders

Meet Oksana Abboud

“2022 marks the 20th anniversary of StreetNet International since its establishment in Durban, South Africa,” notes Oksana, International Coordinator of StreetNet, the global alliance of street and market vendors.

“WIEGO played a key role in the creation of StreetNet. WIEGO’s leadership at the time recognized the crucial need for an international umbrella to unite and support street vendors around the world.”

With the rapid growth in technology globally, street vendor organizations should position themselves to take advantage of this with new approaches and strategies, Oksana says.

“We might see integration of street vendors into digital platforms, with vendors finding their niche in using the technology for sustainability, development and livelihood purposes.”

She believes that a shift could be coming, with street vendors gaining more recognition and respect for their human and workers’ rights and their role as economic players. StreetNet is growing – expanding its borders and attracting new members, and WIEGO gives the movement recognition and confidence at international and other levels, she says.

“It means a lot to be part of a global network for the vulnerable, for the unrecognized – and to be part of such a highly respected network with a high level of organization ... It empowers us and brings us into more unity. We feel part of a big family.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Street Vendors and Market Traders Organization and Representation Programme

The implementation of ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy is an ongoing WIEGO priority. In the spirit of that transition, five towns across two provinces in South Africa have established a formal relationship between street vendor representatives and council officials. In October 2021, the two parties held a policy dialogue where public-space guidelines were launched, and they signed a joint declaration of commitment to practical interventions to improve the vendors’ working conditions. These and other achievements in which WIEGO played a key role have generated more media coverage and created the potential for significant shifts in workers’ material conditions.

Statistics Programme

The programme prepared briefs at the national, urban and city levels on main worker groups, including street vendors and market traders, for Chile and Senegal. The Chile brief was presented to representatives of unions and federations of street vendors, waste pickers, domestic workers and home-based workers, the Workers United Centre of Chile and a representative of the metropolitan region’s Ministry of Labour and Social Provision. Worker organizations noted how important it is to have statistics for their advocacy and to bring visibility.

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Law Programme

WIEGO’s Administrative Justice project aims to provide people working in public space with the knowledge and skills to defend their rights against violations by public authorities, and the ability to demand access to and participate meaningfully in law and policymaking processes. In Senegal and Ghana, the Law Programme mapped institutions and stakeholders involved in the regulation and management of public space and interviewed public authorities and vendors to assess regulations that govern access to space and its implementation on the ground. The study’s theme was law and the distribution of power and entitlements in the urban space from the vantage point of street and market vendors. Also, WIEGO’s analysis of COVID-19 in seven Asian countries shows that laws and policies do not recognize informal traders as legitimate economic actors or the role that informal food vendors play in promoting food security. WIEGO’s analysis of the pandemic laws that regulated informal work in 16 countries in Latin America generated similar conclusions.

Social Protection Programme

In response to growing needs highlighted by the COVID-19 crisis, the Social Protection Programme expanded its regional advocacy for income protection this year. The adoption of the African Union’s Protocol on Social Protection in February 2022 was cause for celebration as WIEGO has worked with partners, including StreetNet International, to ensure that this legally binding instrument directly includes workers in informal employment in policy making, among other demands. The fact that the African Union now has a single binding instrument that addresses a broad range of social protection issues sets a clearer direction for regional advocacy. Also in Africa, a notable gain for street vendors and other workers in informal employment operating in public space was made when the South African Local Government Association (SALGA) drew on WIEGO’s child-care work with Asiye eTafuleni to include child-care provision in their Public Space Trading Guidelines, 2021-2026.

Urban Policies Programme

The Urban Policies Programme has worked this year on securing inclusive planning practices and policy in a range of contexts and countries. In New York City, UPP partnered with the Street Vendor Project on the COVID-19 impact study and together they jointly identified lessons in advocacy that have global relevance. Also, WIEGO’s work in local-level experimentation with urban planning and design and legal frameworks was profiled in the United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) Gold VI Report, which documents public-space trading innovations in Durban, South Africa, and Delhi, India, as well as institutionalized social dialogue in Lima, Peru.

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How WIEGO Supports Waste Pickers

Meet Coura Ndiaye

Coura is an honorary leader among waste pickers in the Mbeubeuss dumpsite, about 30 kilometres away from Dakar, capital of Senegal. People generally call her “Mother Coura” out of respect for her age and the number of years she has worked as a waste picker.

In 2000, Coura joined the Association of Waste Pickers of Mbeubeuss, known as Bokk Diom, and she later led the association. She is a firm believer in the importance of being organized – particularly for women – in order to defend waste pickers’ livelihoods and improve their working conditions.

This is particularly crucial as the government has so far refused to include waste pickers in its current solid waste management project, or at least guarantee their means of subsistence, Coura says. The restructuring of the dumpsite led by the waste management agency is affecting women waste pickers’ working conditions and safety.

“For example, the road they built to get to the platform, this road is the cause of the flooding. Because this road is very high, if it rains, it flows directly onto us.”

She says Bokk Diom needs to become stronger and improve communication between leaders and members to tackle the challenges and needs. The waste pickers also need help from the government’s waste management agency to improve their working conditions at the dumpsite, which would increase their income, Coura says.

“The state should help us and not the other way around. We are the first in this dumpsite, and we are the most legitimate to benefit from the dumpsite.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Waste Pickers

Organization and Representation Programme

The Organization & Representation Programme has supported progress towards the establishment of a global organization of waste pickers, including with discussions of a draft Constitution and issues that have helped build a sense of common purpose. Early in 2022, WIEGO coordinated a delegation of waste picker MBOs to participate in the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi, Kenya, in support of a global plastics treaty. A significant victory was achieved when the UNEA-5.2 resolution recognized waste pickers as recyclers of plastics in informal and cooperative settings. WIEGO also has focused on empowering MBOs to engage governments and the private sector on Extended Producer Responsibility policies and regulations. In South Africa, this led to an agreement in principle about payment to waste pickers for their environmental services.

Statistics Programme

The identification of waste pickers through national surveys presents special problems. However, national survey data are a useful starting point. Waste Pickers in Brazil: A Statistical Profile (WIEGO Statistical Brief No. 29), published in English and Portuguese in November 2021, provides statistics on the extent of waste picker employment in the country, urban areas and major cities, as well as waste pickers’ characteristics and working conditions. The Statistics Programme is working with the WIEGO team and members of the waste picker community to improve methods for collecting data on these workers.

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Law Programme

In the Waste Pickers and Human Rights project, WIEGO and partners petitioned the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights for the right to work to include workers in informal employment and for a thematic hearing on the rights violations of waste pickers in seven Latin American countries. While the hearing was not granted, the team was invited to meet with the commissioners and will petition again for a hearing. The Law Programme did capacity building with waste pickers to enable the workers to present arguments in front of the commission, and collaboration is continuing. Also, the Administrative Justice stream of work is strengthening its focus on R204, which provides a comprehensive model of formalization that recognizes the socio-economic contributions of workers in informal employment and promotes the adoption of enabling regulatory frameworks and strategies that prioritize their needs. The next phase adopts a strong cross-sectoral approach, involving organizations of waste pickers, who share the struggle for access and meaningful use of public space.

Urban Policies Programme

Through the CataSaúde Viraliza project in Brazil, WIEGO enhanced worker capacity to reduce risks and secure gains. By the end of July 2021, more than 400 waste pickers had completed the online capacitybuilding project that sought to provide waste pickers with a deeper understanding of decent work conditions and health and safety protocols. Participants represented all five regions of Brazil. The CataSaúde Viraliza project focused on strengthening alliances with both organized and nonorganized waste pickers, by drawing on the expertise of multiple partners and research activists. For several of these partners, this was the first time they had worked together to help bridge understandings among both groups of waste pickers. In Belo Horizonte, WIEGO celebrated 10 years of the Gender and Waste Project with an e-book launch where women waste picker leaders reflected on gains made in working to build gender awareness in the National Waste Pickers Movement (MNCR) and local cooperatives.

Social Protection Programme

With WIEGO support, the Movement of Excluded Workers (MTE) – a member of Unión de Trabajadores y Trabajadoras de la Economía Popular (UTEP) – in Argentina developed an innovative programme through their child-care and after-school centres to support children who experienced abuse during the COVID-19 lockdown periods. UTEP-MTE were able to adapt their child-care services rapidly to respond to the needs of waste pickers, street vendors, garment workers and community workers represented in the union.

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 29

How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams Support Workers in Informal Employment

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Delhi,
Mexico City, India
Mexico SenegalDakar, Accra,
Ghana
Lima, Peru
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WIEGO’s Focal Cities approach supports organizations of workers in informal employment to engage with government officials to secure more inclusive laws and regulations, improved urban services and a voice in urban planning and policymaking processes. WIEGO’s five Focal Cities are Accra, Ghana; Dakar, Senegal; Delhi, India; Lima, Peru; and Mexico City, Mexico.

Accra, Ghana The team works with market traders, street vendors, waste pickers and market porters.

Dakar, Senegal The team works with market traders, street vendors, prepared meals vendors and waste pickers.

In Accra, the Focal Cities team’s work focused on securing progressive national child-care guidelines. These were developed through a participatory process that brought together parents of children in marketbased day-care centres, informal trade organization representatives, child-care workers, officials from the Department of Social Welfare and the Department of Children, an urban planning specialist, an early childhood care and development expert and a legal consultant. The guidelines, which integrate the concerns of workers in informal employment, fill a gap in Ghana’s regulatory framework for child-care centres in markets. Market trade represents 40 per cent of women’s employment in Greater Accra and urban Ghana.

WIEGO’s work in Dakar supporting waste pickers from the Mbeubeuss dumpsite has a growing focus on promoting a just transition that would secure their livelihoods as the government implements a World Bank-funded project to restructure and eventually close the dumpsite. Working with the National Confederation of Workers of Senegal (CNTS), WIEGO’s launch of the findings of the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study resulted in a public pledge of inclusion in the project from the President of Senegal and a promise by the project head to

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 30

improve working conditions. To boost the capacities of Bokk Diom – the organization of waste pickers in Mbeubeuss – to defend their rights and position themselves within waste management, WIEGO and Bokk Diom developed research on alternative livelihoods and jointly engaged in organizational strengthening efforts. In December 2021, supported by WIEGO and the ILO, waste pickers from Bokk Diom successfully formed a cooperative, and they are in the process of creating a union.

Delhi, India The team works with domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and waste pickers and focuses on inclusion of issues affecting workers in informal employment in cross-sectoral urban discourses.

WIEGO and its partners in Delhi saw the culmination of several years of joint advocacy when the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) released its draft Delhi Master Plan 2041. For the first time, the informal economy is recognized as the city’s largest employer, and the plan contains enabling language for the integration of workers in informal employment. To achieve this change, the Focal Cities Delhi team supported a broad-based campaign – the Main Bhi Dilli (“I, Too, Am Delhi”) coalition – to influence the master plan as a “people’s plan” with supportive measures for housing, livelihood and social infrastructure. After the draft was released, the coalition successfully advocated for an extension of the public comment period to allow for broader citizen participation. It also supported grassroots leaders in organizing 250 meetings with worker groups across Delhi, and helped facilitate the submission of 25,000 comments from workers in informal employment and community groups across Delhi to the DDA.

Lima, Peru The team works with domestic workers, homebased workers, street vendors, waste pickers, “ canillitas ”/ newspaper vendors and market porters.

Following the Lima launch of WIEGO’s COVID-19 study, President Pedro Castillo mentioned the pandemic’s effects on workers in informal employment and announced a programme that would satisfy a key demand. In his July 28, 2021 inaugural speech, Castillo announced financial support for micro and small enterprises. The measures included state-guaranteed credit with longer grace periods, refinancing of debt, and support to women entrepreneurs. Access to credit of small amounts and affordable interest rates have been key workers’ demands coming out of the study.

Mexico City, Mexico The team works with domestic workers, street vendors, waste pickers and non-salaried workers including mariachi musicians, coffee vendors, shoe shiners and organ players.

In Mexico City, the team continued engaging Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH) on informal worker issues and supporting workers in filing complaints with the commission regarding evictions, confiscations and destruction of property. The commission’s bulletin highlighted the importance of non-salaried work and called on all decision makers to avoid the use of stigmatizing and offensive language in relation to those who carry out this work. The commission called attention to the fact that in Mexico, “more than 90 per cent of paid domestic work operates informally, despite the existence of a mechanism for labour and social security regulation.”

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Publications and Resources

WIEGO Publications Catalogue

This catalogue is a full guide to our latest publications.

Highlights from Peer-Reviewed Publications

Every year, WIEGO researchers write and contribute to academic journal articles. For a complete list of edited volumes, book chapters, journal articles and peer-reviewed working papers, visit our website.

Chen, Martha, Erofili Grapsa, Ghida Ismail, Michael Rogan, Marcela Valdivia, Laura Alfers, Jenna Harvey, Ana Carolina Ogando, Sarah Reed and Sally Roever, 2022. “COVID-19 and informal work: Evidence from 11 cities.” International Labour Review . Special Issue: “COVID-19 and the World of Work.”

Ogando, Ana Carolina, Michael Rogan and Rachel Moussié, 2022. “ - Impacts of the Covid 19 Pandemic and Unpaid Care Work on Informal Workers’ Livelihoods.” International Labour Review . Special Issue: “COVID-19 and the World of Work.”

Highlights from the WIEGO Publication Series

Briefs aim to provide user-friendly documentation for those involved in advocacy, policy and research on the informal economy.

Policy

WIEGO and IDWF, 2021. Domestic Workers and Social Protection in Nagaland . WIEGO Policy Brief (Social Protection) No. 27.

Statistical

Gayatri Koolwal, 2022. Informal Workers in Senegal: A Statistical Profile . WIEGO Statistical Brief No. 31.

Technical

Wegmann, Julia Mareike, Sonia Medina Cardona and Adriana Pérez Campos, 2022. Trabajo en el espacio público y movilidad: herramientas para la coexistencia de dos derechos en la Ciudad de México . Nota técnica de WIEGO No. 14.

Lees, Joanne and Richard Dobson, 2021. Inclusive Public Space Planning & Design: Lessons from Asiye eTafuleni, Durban, South Africa . WIEGO Technical Brief No. 13.

Law and Informality Insights

Teresa Marchiori, 2022. Social Movement Lawyering: A Reflection on the Nature of Law and Lawyering Through the Lens of Informal Workers . Law and Informality Insights, No. 5.

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Resource Documents include WIEGO-generated literature reviews, annotated bibliographies and papers reflecting the findings of new empirical work. They provide detail to support advocacy, policy or research on specific issues.

Bamu, Pamhidzai, Laura Alfers, Rutendo Mudarikwa and Theodore Kamwimbi, 2022. Social Protection for Self-Employed Informal Workers in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Rights-Based Assessment of the Impact of the COVID-19 Crisis. WIEGO Resource Document No. 24.

Highlights from the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study

The COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study – a WIEGOcoordinated multi-city longitudinal study – assessed the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on specific occupational groups of workers in informal employment and their households, with a focus on domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and waste pickers. For a complete list of publications and resources from the study, visit our website.

Social Protection COVID-19 Briefs

WIEGO produced a series of briefng notes to analyze the social protection responses to COVID-19. The briefs aimed to support movements in their advocacy efforts to expand social protection to workers in informal employment.

WIEGO, 2022. Issue #3: Bolsa Familia: Past and Future of the Brazilian Cash-Grant Programme .

The Informal Economy Podcast: Social Protection is a source of accessible information that raises awareness about research and debates on social protection for workers in informal employment.

Episode #25: Social Insurance for Informal Workers in South Africa.

Global Findings

COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy: Round 1 Global Summary – Executive Summary

City Fact Sheets, Policy Insights

Braham, Christy, 2021. COVID-19 Vaccination and Informal Workers: Immunize, Don’t Marginalize . Policy Insights No. 9.

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WIEGO Publication Highlights Through the Years

Chen, Marty, Erofili Grapsa, Ghida Ismail, Mike Rogan, Marcela Valdivia, Laura Alfers, Jenna Harvey, Ana Carolina Ogando, Sarah Orleans Reed and Sally Roever, 2021. COVID-19 and Informal Work: Distinct Pathways of Impact and Recovery in 11 Cities Around the World . WIEGO Working Paper No. 42.

This working paper reflects the global findings from the first round of fieldwork monitoring the impact on workers in informal employment of measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Building on a long track record of multi-city panel studies, WIEGO, working with MBO partners, interviewed domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and waste pickers in 11 cities in mid-2020 and mid-2021. This paper and associated research has been widely cited, with national and international policy uptake.

Chen, Martha and Françoise Carré (eds), 2020. The Informal Economy Revisited: Examining the Past, Envisioning the Future . New York: Routledge.

The Informal Economy Revisited is the culmination of 20 years of pioneering work by WIEGO. The 34-chapter open-access volume brings together leading scholars from a wide range of disciplines and is the definitive

volume on the informal economy. It investigates conceptual shifts, research findings and policy debates on the informal economy, providing grounded insight into disciplinary debates. The book calls for a paradigm shift in how the informal economy is perceived to reflect the realities of informal work in the Global South, as well as the informal practices of the state and capital, not just labour.

Bonnet, Florence, Joann Vanek and Martha Chen, 2019. Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Brief . WIEGO and ILO.

This brief presents the first-ever global estimates of informal employment, showing that 2 billion people – 61 per cent of the global workforce – earn their living in the informal economy. It shows that informality exists in countries at all levels of socio-economic development. It provides global and regional estimates on the size and composition of informal employment reflecting key variables: gender, status of employment, and branch of industry. This brief is a key reference for policy and academic analysis.

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 34

Chen, Martha, 2012. The Informal Economy: Definitions, Theories and Policies . WIEGO Working Paper No. 1.

This working paper, the first in the WIEGO Working Paper series, provides an overview of the definitional, theoretical and policy debates on the informal economy. It gives a brief historical overview of the informal-sector concept and related debates, details the expanded statistical concept of informal employment, and provides a holistic conceptual model of the composition and causes of informality. It is WIEGO’s most downloaded and cited working paper, framing much of the academic and policy literature on the topic.

Chen, Martha, Joann Vanek, Francie Lund, James Heintz, Renana Jhabvala and Christine Bonner, 2005. Progress of the World’s Women 2005: Women, Work and Poverty . New York: United Nations Development Fund for Women.

This report, commissioned by UNIFEM, positioned women’s informal employment as a key pathway to reducing poverty and strengthening women’s economic security. An important empirical contribution is the analysis of national data on average earnings and poverty risk across different segments of the informal and formal workforces, showing the links between employment, gender and poverty. It provides a strategic framework – with good-practice examples – for how to promote decent work for women in informal employment.

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Financial Report: Year Ended 31 March 2022

Financial Governance

Financial Summary

The Finance Committee of the WIEGO Board has responsibility for overseeing the financial management and audit of the accounts to ensure the sustainability and future viability of WIEGO. This includes the review of annual budgets, as well as continuous review of budgetary and financial controls to reduce the risk of underspending or overspending, and to mitigate a possible shortfall in income in any financial year. This risk is further mitigated by the building of designated reserves, which currently stand at a level of USD320,000 for the General Assembly to be held in November 2022, and free reserves of USD532,000 to maintain core programmes for a three-month period.

The Finance Committee reports to the WIEGO Board of Directors for final decisions on budgets and risk management.

For the year ended 31 March 2022, WIEGO received an unqualified opinion from its auditors, Crowe UK LLP. The figures in the financial summaries for the Balance Sheet, Source of Funds, and Use of Funds are extracted from the statutory accounts, which were approved by the Directors on 10 August 2022. The auditors have confirmed to the Directors that the extracts are consistent with the statutory financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2022.

These extracts may not contain sufficient information to allow for a full understanding of the financial affairs of the company. Therefore, the full statutory accounts should be consulted together with the Auditors’ Report and the Directors’ Report, which are available from the Company Secretary at the company’s registered office in Manchester, United Kingdom. Additionally, the full statutory accounts will be available online after completion of all regulatory filings.

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 36

Balance Sheet

The increase in net assets for the period is primarily a result of receipt of a five-year grant from the Ford Foundation of USD25 million and is reflected in Cash at Bank.

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BALANCE SHEET 2021-22 2020-21
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BALANCE SHEET
2021-22
2020-21
BALANCE SHEET
2021-22
2020-21
BALANCE SHEET
2021-22
2020-21
CURRENT ASSETS USD $000 USD $000
Accounts Receivable 129 161
Cash at bank 32,101 6,862
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS 32,230 7,023
CREDITORS
Accounts Payable -3,046 -691
NET ASSETS 29,184 6,332
FUNDS
Restricted Funds 25757 2999
Unrestricted Funds 3,427 3,334
29,184 6,333

Source and Use of Funds

The total incoming resources were USD33.1 million for the financial year ended 31 March 2022, compared to USD11.5 million in the previous year. Total resources expended were USD10.3 million, compared to USD7.2 million in the previous year.

Source of Funds

Over the past 25 years, WIEGO has received support from several funders in our efforts to empower workers in informal employment around the globe. During the financial year ended 31 March 2022, WIEGO received funding from 12 major institutional funders. This includes the five-year grant from the Ford Foundation, which will be distributed equally among WIEGO and the four main international networks of workers in informal employment that are part of the WIEGO Network, and will be used to support organizational strengthening work.

WIEGO is grateful to the organizations, foundations and governments for their generous financial support over the years.

Source : Extract from the statutory accounts

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 37

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SOURCE OF FUNDS 2021-22 2020-21
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SOURCE OF FUNDS
2021-22
2020-21
SOURCE OF FUNDS
2021-22
2020-21
SOURCE OF FUNDS
2021-22
2020-21
USD $000 USD $000
Ford Foundation 25,200 354
Swedish International Development Agency 3,765 2,732
The Open Societies Foundation 3,015 1,418
Echidna 2 375 0
IDRC COVID-19 Study 314 362
Comic Relief 121 127
DFID 92 120
WellspringPhilanthropic 50 100
International Labour Organisation 11 20
USAID 10 0
The William Flora Hewlett Foundation 0 5,970
UN Women 0 44
Cities Alliance 0 27
FES 0 24
Other Sources 187 246
TOTAL FUNDING 33,140 11,544
Source: Extract from the statutory accounts

Source of Funds for Year 2021/22

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11%
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76%
9%
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1% <1% 1% 1% <1% Ford Foundation IDRC COVID-19 Study Swedish International Comic Relief Development Agency DFID The Open Societies Foundation Other Echidna 2

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022 38

Use of Funds 2021-2022

WIEGO’s strategy is designed to ensure that the maximum possible resources are channelled directly into programmes to meet the objective of delivering high-quality improvements in research, policy advocacy and capacity building. It is worth noting that 92 per cent of resources were expended in the direct and indirect support of MBOs for programme implementation, planning and monitoring.

Use of Funds for Year 2021/22

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29%
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53%
2% 5% 10%
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1%

Programme Implementation–MBO Direct Support Programme Implementation–General Programme Planning and Monitoring Operations, Finance and Admin Governance Fundraising

WIEGO’s Work

39

Annual Report, April 2021 - March 2022

Annual Reports WIEGO Digest - WIEGO Membership Based Organizations Newsletters Law & Informality Newsletters

WIEGO Online Resources

Blogs Videos Webinars

WIEGO Social Media Channels

Company Registration No: 6273538

Charity Registration No: 1143510 DRAFT

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE)

For the year ended 31 March 2022

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CONTENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Page
Legal and administrative information 1 - 2
Directors’ report 3 - 16
Independent Auditors' report 17 - 19
Statement of financial activities 20
Balance sheet 21
Cash Flow Statement 22
Notes to the financial statements 23 - 42
Appendices 43 - 58

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2022

Name:

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited

Charity Registration No: Company Registration No: Principal and Registered Address

1143510

6273538

521 Royal Exchange Manchester M2 7EN United Kingdom

Telephone: Website:

0161 819 1200 www.wiego.org

Names of Current Directors

The Directors of WIEGO, which is a charitable company, are its trustees for the purposes of charity law. Throughout this report the Directors are collectively referred to as the Board.

Mirai Chatterjee (Chair) Debra Davis (Treasurer) Barbro Budin Lin Lim Lean William (Biff) Steel Gabriela Calandria Luciana Fukimoto Itikawa Uma Rani Elizabeth yin Ngor Tang Patrick Sibusiso Ndlovu

Chief Executive Officer (known as International Co-ordinator)

Sally Roever

Company Secretary

Bertha Isidore (August 25, 2022)

Bankers

Santander UK Bank plc Manchester Business Centre 298 Deansgate Manchester M3 4HH

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2022

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Solicitors

Bates Wells and Braithwaite 2 – 6 Cannon Street London EC4M 6YH

Programme Team

Sally Roever Jane Barrett Marlese von Broembsen Rhonda Douglas Laura Alfers Mike Rogan Caroline Skinner Francoise Carré

International Co-ordinator Programme Director, Organization & Representation Programme Director, Law Programme Strategy Advisor Programme Director, Social Protection Interim Programme Director, Urban Policies Programme Director, Urban Policies Programme Director, Statistics

Operations Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Bertha Isidore Company Secretary Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Mike Bird Operations Director Megan Landeros Research and Administrative Assistant to the International Co-ordinator Carol Clayman Executive Assistant to International Coordinator

2

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Board of Directors of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Ltd presents the Directors’ Annual Report for the year end 31st March 2022.

1. STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT

WIEGO’s structure, governance and management are illustrated by the organogram in Appendix 1.

Structure

WIEGO is a charity registered in England and Wales (No. 1143510) and is constituted as a company registered in England and Wales and limited by guarantee (No. 6273538). The Directors, officers and advisors of the organisation during 2021-22 are listed on page 1 and 2. The company was established under a Memorandum of Association which established the objects and powers of the company and is governed under our Articles of Association. Revised governing documents of WIEGO conforming to the Companies Act 2006 and the decisions of the General Assembly in April 2010 were accepted by the Board and lodged with Companies House in July 2011. In the event of the company being wound up members are not required to contribute an amount exceeding £1.

All WIEGO funds are received and managed by the Operations Office of WIEGO in Manchester, UK.

As at the end of the financial year, more than twelve institutional funders provided financial support for WIEGO including a five year grant from the Ford Foundation of $25 million, over $3.7 million from Sida and $3 million from the Open Society Foundations. WIEGO also received grants from Echidna/Schwab, IDRC, Comic Relief, DFID, Wellspring Philanthropy, International Labour Organisation and USAID.

Governance

WIEGO is governed by a 10-person Board of Directors. The Directors are the Members of the Company and also the trustees of WIEGO as a registered charity. The Board ensures that WIEGO’s activities carry into effect the Charity’s object. Its work includes setting the strategic direction; scrutinising performance, quality and finances; and agreeing the financial strategy and operational budgets. The Board meets at least three times a year either physically, by teleconference, or by electronic means. In the current year, given the circumstances of the pandemic, there was one video conference meeting of the Board and two teleconference meetings.

WIEGO’s Board of Directors is comprised of three representatives of membership-based organizations of informal workers (one of whom serves as the Chair); two representatives each from the other two constituencies of WIEGO (researchers and development professionals); and three other persons coopted by the Board as needed to carry out the functions of the Board.

The Board was re-constituted during the four-yearly General Assembly that was held in Johannesburg in November 2018. Four of the previous Board of Directors were nominated and elected by the membership of the wider WIEGO network at this General Assembly and three new Directors were appointed. Three other members were co-opted by the Board thereafter. The Board has representation from Africa, Latin America and Asia as well as Europe and North America. A full term for any Director is four years and Directors may be re-elected or re-appointed to serve for a further term in any given office. The Board represents all WIEGO members between General Assemblies in accordance with WIEGO’s Articles of Association.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

The International Coordinator speaks regularly with the Chair of the Board, the Treasurer and other Directors to ensure that they are all kept fully informed. Delegated decisions made at other levels of WIEGO are regularly reported to the Board and its Committees to ensure Directors have full information to fulfil their roles. The Board is supported in its work by the Management Committee, the Finance Committee and other ad hoc committees and working groups as required. The Human Resources Sub Committee of the Management Committee considers and makes recommendations regarding human resource issues. Committee reports are a standing agenda item for the Board of Directors meetings.

The Management Committee consists of five members including four Directors and the International Coordinator. The Management Committee is chiefly responsible for overseeing the programmes and policies of WIEGO. The core programmes of WIEGO (Social Protection, Organisation and Representation, Urban Policies, Statistics and Law) are each led by a Programme Director. Reports are received from the Programme Directors of these programme areas by the International Coordinator and the Management Committee, together with reports from the Company Secretary, Programme Strategy Advisor, Regional Advisors, the Research Coordinator and the Operations Director.

The Finance Committee reports to the Board of Directors and consists of six members, comprising three Directors, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller/Company Secretary and the Operations Director. It convenes at least four times a year to consider reports from, among others the Treasurer, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller (who also serves as Company Secretary) and external auditors. The Finance Committee is responsible for reviewing and monitoring all aspects relating to the preparation and production of the annual financial statements of WIEGO. Specifically, in terms of annual statutory accounts, this includes consideration of accounting policies, levels of disclosure, risk management policies, compliance with applicable corporate governance requirements, and reviewing any relevant matters relating to annual financial statements raised by the external auditors as a result of audit work. The Finance Committee recommends the audited financial statements to the Board of Directors for approval. It makes recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditors and approves their remuneration and terms of engagement. It reviews the performance and reports the results of external auditors’ work annually to the Board.

Since our incorporation, WIEGO has undergone considerable change and expansion. This change and expansion has required an extensive updating of our management and operations processes and procedures. As this organisational development has progressed, WIEGO has ensured that our governance arrangements are appropriate, effective and evolving to changed circumstances by having Directors who bring a wealth of organisational, research and professional experience to WIEGO.

The Directors are assisted by WIEGO’s International Coordinator, the Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, the Operations Director, the Financial Controller / Company Secretary. Board Members are kept informed about major issues affecting WIEGO. All Directors are aware of their legal and financial responsibility to run the company effectively and to act in its best interests.

All WIEGO Directors are also aware of their responsibility for WIEGO’s strategic direction and their responsibility to fulfil WIEGO’s objectives through assessing the organisation’s performance, ensuring the correct policies are in place and that WIEGO’s activities reflect the needs of our beneficiaries. Reflecting this responsibility, the WIEGO Board and Team monitor the implementation of the current 5- year strategic plan, which was set out in 2018.

The Directors also have access to professional advice and guidance from external advisors, including WIEGO’s external auditors, Crowe U.K. LLP, Co-operatives UK and its solicitors, Bates Wells & Braithwaite LLP.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

Recruitment and Appointment

The WIEGO General Assembly in 2018 elected seven Board members from the three constituencies of members. A Nominating Committee solicits nominations from the WIEGO Membership and then proposes a slate of nominees to the Board and the General Assembly for their approval. The Nominating Committee consists of five persons, two appointed by the Board and one person elected by each constituency of the membership at the time of each quadrennial General Assembly. Elections are usually agreed by consensus but if that is not possible then by a simple majority of votes cast. In preparing the slate of nominees for the Board, from among those nominated by the membership, the Nominating Committee is guided by the principle of achieving reasonable balance on the Board as a whole and ensuring representation from each of the three membership constituencies. The Nominating Committee also takes into account the range of skills and experience required for the Board to exercise its responsibilities and to conduct its business in an efficient and effective manner to the benefit of WIEGO and its beneficiaries.

The Board also has powers to co-opt to fill vacancies. It co-opted Debra Davis, a chartered accountant with international experience as a Director and Treasurer at the time of General Assembly in 2018. Two further Directors were co-opted by the Board at its meeting on the 9[th] May 2019. One of these co-opted Directors, Elizabeth Tang, stepped down for personal reasons in December 2021, however we are hopeful that she will be able to re-join the Board in the following financial year.

Each has a commitment to WIEGO’s aims and their appointment ends at the next General Assembly, to be held in November 2022. They may be re-appointed.

nduction and training

In line with National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) guidelines, all Directors were inducted into the work of WIEGO and the legal roles and responsibilities of Directors, through briefings by the International Coordinator, the Company Secretary, the Board Chair and the Programme Directors.

Management

The Board has delegated day-to-day leadership and management of WIEGO’s affairs and the implementing of agreed policies and strategies to the International Coordinator, Sally Roever. She is assisted by a team of Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, a Research Coordinator and an Operations Team who operate within an approved scheme of delegation (see Appendix 1). The former International Coordinator, Marty Chen, has stayed on as Senior Advisor to WIEGO and continues to support the organisation especially in the areas of research and fundraising.

The development of the organisation since 2007 has required the extension and updating of operational procedures. This is a continuing process requiring revision of the Operations Manual on occasion through 2020/21.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Equality and Diversity

In its Articles of Association, WIEGO is committed to opposing discrimination in matters of gender, race, faith, age, sexual orientation, or disability, and to operate within an equal opportunities framework. This commitment is currently applied to the delivery of WIEGO’s programme, our employment practices and for the organisation of our membership. During the previous financial year, we established a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion working group, chaired by the International Coordinator and in the 2021/22 financial year we took on a DEI partner, Emunthini Consulting based in South Africa to steer us through a process to confront and overcome the biases and power imbalances that are present within WIEGO as much as in any other institution.

Staff Involvement

WIEGO seeks to engage all employees, key contractors and members in our activities and achievements. A number of teams have been set up to improve working together and ensure delivery of results. These include the Operations Team, the Programme Team, the Communications Team, the Fundraising Team and others. There are a number of routine communication methods, notably frequent and regular emails, an intranet, skyping, teleconferences, and periodic physical meetings. All teams are kept up-to-date by the International Coordinator and via the WIEGO intranet with the activities and developments, such as Directors’ decisions after each cycle of Board and Committee meetings.

There is normally a physical meeting of the WIEGO Team each year, but we held a successful “virtual” Team Retreat in September 2022 because of the continuing restrictions on international travel. With a diverse and geographically dispersed team, it has been important to hold face-to-face meetings in order to establish a team spirit and provide an opportunity to share ideas and challenges and we hope to resume this aspect of our work in the coming financial year.

Risk Management and Internal Controls

Review of the Risk Register is delegated to both the Management Committee and the Finance Committee to support the Board in assessing and prioritising risks and risk-mitigating strategies across WIEGO. Relevant sections of the Risk Register were reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees according to their terms of reference. The Committees monitored the major risks to which WIEGO is exposed, recommended steps to mitigate risks, and oversaw the implementation of effective risk management. The two Committees report once a year to the Board on the Risk Register and the risk management strategy. The Risk Register was amended by the Finance and Management Committees in June and in November of 2022.

The Finance and Management Committees identify the operational, financial and reputational risks WIEGO faces, prioritising them in terms of potential impact and likelihood of occurrence and proposing means of mitigating the risks. With the continuing development of the risk management strategy, the Board is assured that:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Covid pandemic, and the continuing restrictions under which we have all been living, led us to consider new risks relating to the physical and mental health of the WIEGO Team and we have put in place protocols to manage these, including strict controls on face-to-face working where this is possible to undertake at all, and regular, virtual Team meetings. We have also taken steps to manage the increased risk of cyber-crime. Foreign exchange risk is also a key risk as we receive funds in USD, GBP and SEK. Currency matching and the continuing review of the impact of exchange rate fluctuations are in place. We were fortunate not to face any reduction in our ability to raise funds for WIEGO’s work during the pandemic, and in fact many of our donors contributed additional funds to enable us to respond to its impact on informal workers.

The Board recognises that, to achieve the objectives of WIEGO, the nature of our work requires acceptance of some risks which are outside our control and cannot therefore be eliminated or fully managed. Where this happens, there is active and clear monitoring of such risk. The Board is satisfied that systems are in place to monitor, manage and mitigate WIEGO’s exposure to major risks.

Internal Financial Control

The Financial Controller’s work is framed largely by WIEGO’s regulations, policies, operations manual and risk assessments. The Directors created an Operations Manual when WIEGO was incorporated to ensure the adequacy of WIEGO’s internal controls. It has been updated during the year and is reviewed regularly. Audit recommendations are systematically followed up and monitoring reports are received by the Finance Committee. The Accounting Software system used by WIEGO (Xero) provides access to financial information by budget holders and others across the globe.

The Treasurer reviews the work and ensures, through the Finance Committee and the Operations Team, that the Board and the Management Committee have confidence that:

The key procedures which the Directors have established with a view to providing effective internal control are as follows:

Each year Directors approve the annual budget taking account of the key risk areas and also of income and expenditure patterns from the previous year. Performance is monitored and relevant action taken throughout the year through the periodic reporting to the Directors of variances from budget, updated forecasts for the year and information on the key risk areas.

Key Management Personnel

The Key Management Personnel consists of Sally Roever, International Coordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and works from her home in Virginia, USA. Her salary is determined by the Board.

Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where remuneration is set according to the WIEGO remuneration policy, which is reviewed periodically by the Management Committee.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

2. OBJECTIVES, AIMS AND PUBLIC BENEFIT

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) is a global research-policy network that seeks to improve the status of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy. By doing so, our aim is to ensure in the long term the well-being of the working poor and the reduction of poverty.

The objects of the charity are set out in paragraphs 3 and 4 of WIEGO’s Articles of Association as follows:

The Company's objects are to relieve poverty: in particular, the poverty of the working poor in the informal economy caused by low earnings, high risks, and adverse working environments and conditions associated with the informal economy worldwide (including non-standard or unprotected employment for formal firms);

In carrying out its objects, the Company shall promote equality of opportunity and oppose any form of discrimination on grounds of race, ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability or religion.

In order to achieve our objects, WIEGO seeks to increase the Visibility, Validity and Voice of the working poor in informal employment:

The individuals and institutions in the WIEGO network are drawn from three broad constituencies: membership-based organizations (MBOs) of informal workers; individuals undertaking research and statistical work with regard to informal employment, and development practitioners in agencies of various types (non-governmental, governmental, and inter-governmental).

Together with our allies in the international movement of informal workers, WIEGO seeks:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Since its founding, the WIEGO network has developed several distinct features that enable us to influence mainstream perceptions, policies and institutions. First, WIEGO focuses on the concrete reality of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy and seeks to integrate an evidenced based understanding of this concrete reality into mainstream development thinking, policies and institutions.

Second, WIEGO builds effective alliances between our three constituencies and draws on the distinct expertise of each constituency in our work:

Third, WIEGO has developed programme initiatives and technical expertise on a range of issues that address the expressed needs and concerns of informal workers. Finally, and importantly, WIEGO builds networks and partnerships by providing technical support to and working closely with membershipbased organisations of informal workers. A more detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2021/22 is provided in a separate Appendix 2.

Grant making

Our grant making policy is to work with associations within WIEGO’s wider network who share WIEGO’s objectives and are well placed to deliver effective projects. Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal constructive obligation.

Public Benefit

In preparing this report, the Directors confirm that they have complied with the duty in section 17 of the 2011 Charities Act. To the best of their ability, they took into account and consistently applied the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit, as set out in its publications “Charities and Public Benefit: the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit” and “The Prevention or Relief of Poverty for Public Benefit”.

The Charity’s object is set out in our Articles of Association as revised on 19[th] July 2011 and the Directors’ current interpretation of these is set out in this report, while the report as a whole covers WIEGO’s activities and achievements throughout the world pursuant to this object.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

3. ACHIEVEMENTS AND PERFORMANCE

A detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2021/22 is provided as Appendix 2. WIEGO publishes an Annual Report each year for general distribution. Appendix 2 is an abridged version of that Annual Report.

Evidence of Impact

For a detailed report on impact achieved during 2021/22 please see Appendix 2.

Communications, Membership Support and Outreach

WIEGO aims to expand its network – partners, members and allies – to strengthen the collaborative activities under this network, and to extend our reach and impact. As of March 2022, WIEGO had 211 members: 39 Institutional Members and 172 Individual Members in some 45 countries.

WIEGO has strengthened membership support and outreach to provide help in building organisational capacity of the Institutional Members (all democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers) and in developing improved two-way communication with them.

WIEGO maintained our strong communications capacity during 2021/22 to help meet our goals of producing user-friendly publications and improving how we disseminate information, with an increasing focus on supporting our messaging through social media. Our long-standing Communications Manager stepped down in February 2022 and she has been replaced on an interim basis by one of the two Deputy Managers.

We have continued to respond to the need for information on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and what informal workers can do to keep safe, with new pages on the WIEGO website and health education messages disseminated via social media in 14 languages.

External Factors Affecting Achievement

Due to the international nature of our work and also our link with partners in countries across the globe, WIEGO recognises there are a number of factors which could affect achievement of our aims and objectives. Significant external factors affecting WIEGO's work and achievements included:

Economic, Policy, and Political Environment: faced by the Working Poor in the Informal Economy

While all these factors are beyond WIEGO’s control, we are able to seek the advice of international partners and experts and consult with the Board and WIEGO’s membership on how best WIEGO can play its role in support of the global movement of informal workers.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Conclusion

From our inception in 1997, WIEGO has been an organisation prepared to undertake policy research and advocacy on behalf of informal workers to increase their Voice, Visibility and Validity and thereby help to increase the well-being and relieve the poverty of the working poor, especially women. This has remained unchanged through 2021/22. WIEGO’s mission, vision and purpose have remained essentially unchanged but the breadth and depth of our activities, the size and capacity of our team, and the effectiveness of our operations and governance systems have remained robust.

4. FINANCIAL REVIEW

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in Note 1 to the financial statements and comply with the requirements of the Statement of Recommended Practice for Accounting and Reporting by Charities, the Charities Acts, and the Companies Acts.

The financial strategy for the year was developed to build on our strategy and achievements from the previous year, which were designed to ensure the sustainability and future viability of WIEGO. We reviewed the resources expended in relation to activities implemented and results achieved. We have also factored in when current grants will end, in order to carefully monitor expenditure and activities to ensure maximum benefit and minimal disruption for members and partners as we try to raise funds for our future work. During the fiscal year ending 31 March 2022, our total incoming resources were $33,152,671 (as compared to $11,549,881 in the previous year). We secured $25 million USD from the Ford Foundation which is a five-year grant, although this is recognised in this financial year due to the regulation on income recognition.

Our total expenditure was $10,301,071 (as compared with $7,205,517 in the previous year).

The overall aim of the financial strategy is to ensure that resources are used efficiently to contribute to meeting programme and project targets and achieve WIEGO’s priorities. In order to achieve our objectives, the maximum levels of resources possible are channelled to the direct benefit of programmes and to deliver necessary quality improvements in research, policy advocacy and capacity building, while maintaining prudent financial management controls over resources of WIEGO as a whole. Budgetary and financial control continues to be reviewed in order to reduce the risks of under or overspending and to mitigate the effect of a drop in income in any one financial year. This is underpinned by the building of reserves.

Going Concern

The indications at the time of writing are that WIEGO is well-placed to weather the ongoing after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and the policies that have been put in place to combat it. Since the start of the pandemic all of our major donors have been in touch to offer their support in the form of additional funding and/or extensions to grant periods and the possibility to redirect funds as necessary in order to meet new and unexpected needs as they arise.

The financial outlook for WIEGO is secure. In October 2021 we received a new five-year grant totalling US$25 million from the Ford Foundation. This is an unrestricted grant intended to support organisational strengthening work for WIEGO and also the four main international networks of informal workers that are part of the WIEGO Network. This new grant comes on top of the two and three-year extensions to the unrestricted grant agreements we signed with the Hewlett Foundation and Sida respectively at the end of the 2019/20 financial year. The respective grants agreed are for US$4 million, since increased by a further US$1 million, and the equivalent of $8.4 million.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

From an organisational point of view WIEGO is also well-placed to continue its work. Almost all of the WIEGO Team already worked from home before the pandemic and the Manchester office has been able to adapt to remote working relatively easily because our banking, financial management and payment systems are all on-line. During the pandemic we have set up systems to ensure that we are taking care of the health and well-being of the Team. We set up weekly meetings of the Manchester office team plus town hall meetings for the whole Team and liaison meetings with the leaders of the networks of informal workers that are our members. These meetings are now held monthly and continue to enable effective management and communication.

The external website and the internal intranet both have dedicated Covid-19 pages that provide effective information management for our Team and wider network.

The Operations Team has added new risks to the WIEGO risk register to cover our understanding of the potential risks to the WIEGO work programme and the health and well-being risks to the Team and this has recently been reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees of the Board. In the meantime, we have demonstrated that the work of WIEGO can continue, albeit through different kinds of activities and delivery mechanisms given the current circumstances. The view of the Directors and the WIEGO management is that the measures described above provide an effective strategy to reduce the risks to the Team.

The charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. In light of the extensions received from current donors, as well as additional funding received from the Ford Foundation for a period of five years, and measures which have been put in place to address operational risks arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Directors are of the view that there are no financial or operational uncertainties which cast doubt about the charity's ability to continue as a going concern in the foreseeable future, and that the financial statements have been prepared accordingly (Financial Statements Note 1.3).

Reserves Policy

WIEGO has built reserves to meet any adverse contingencies. The Board of Directors created reserves to:

During 2021/22 as shown in the Financial Statements, designated reserves were maintained to counter any cash flow issues and to maintain WIEGO’s core activities in the event of fundraising problems. WIEGO has reserves to make long-term commitments to projects, and to protect our work against the effects of financial fluctuations and other uncertainty. The Board of Directors seeks to have reserves at a level at which core programmes can be maintained for a 3-month period.

At present, this requires reserves of approximately $532k. From the US$25M Social Justice Bond (SJB) grant which WIEGO received from the Ford Foundation in FY 2021/22 for a period of five years, US$24M has been placed on a 95-day deposit with Santander Uk plc. currently earning interest at a rate of 1.7% per annum. The interest earned on the deposit will be shared proportionally between WIEGO’s reserves, and the reserves of the international networks of informal workers’ association. Therefore, when added to the existing free reserves, the principal plus interest from the Ford Foundation SJB grant is more than adequate to cover the amount needed for the core programmes for a 3-month period, although the necessary level of reserves is subject to regular review.

We also have $320k set aside for the General Assembly which is a meeting of our members, and a crucial part of our governance structure. This takes place every four years and we are building funds towards meeting the cost of the next General Assembly in November 2022.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The free reserves of $532k carried forward into the new financial year are to fund budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year. These reserves will be carried forward into the new financial year and will be used to fund the budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year.

Investment Policy and Objectives

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

Liquidity is generally preferred over investment. Cash balances are placed in time deposits when appropriate. The board has not established formal targets for return on investment.

In order to minimise foreign exchange losses due to currency exchange rate fluctuations, our policy is to hold funds in the currency in which they are received and to expend them in the same currency wherever possible.

Principal Funding Sources

During 2021/22 WIEGO received our principal funding from the following funders:

Ford Foundation Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) Open Society Foundations Echidna/Schwab IDRC Comic Relief UK FCDO (formerly DFID) Wellspring Philanthropic Fund UN Women International Labour Organisation USAID

There are no outstanding liens against WIEGO.

WIEGO does not undertake any commercial or trading activities.

In note 12 to the Statement of Financial Activities, a declaration on related parties has been made.

Fundraising

The charity had no fundraising activities requiring disclosure under S162A of the Charities Act 2011.

5. PLANS FOR FUTURE PERIODS

Membership

WIEGO is committed to building sector-specific networks or federations of democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers (MBOs). MBOs can become institutional members of WIEGO and form one of three constituencies of membership. Individuals can become members of WIEGO as part of the researchers/statisticians constituency or the development practitioners constituency. The challenges to WIEGO with regard to our relationships with members are various, including how to:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

The securing of a new, five-year grant from the Social Justice Bond of the Ford Foundation allows us to plan for the strengthening of the WIEGO Network and our membership with renewed confidence. The US$25 million grant is intended specifically to be used for organisational strengthening work for WIEGO and each of the four networks of informal workers that make up our institutional membership: StreetNet International, HomeNet International, the International Domestic Workers’ Federation and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers. This gives us a golden opportunity to plan for the future sustainability of the WIEGO Network as a whole.

Programmes and functions

WIEGO has five core programmes of work together with global projects and special initiatives. Across these strands of work cut four functions: research, policy advocacy, communication and capacity building. As part of the strategic review that gave rise to the current five-year strategic plan, work plans for the coming period identify the following challenges:

Allies and Target Audiences

The natural allies and target audiences for WIEGO’s work differ across the domains of our core programmes as highlighted in Appendix 2. Identifying key allies and audiences is difficult in most domains of WIEGO’s work as there are often a large number and range of actors with different perspectives. In many contexts, specific organisations can be both allies and target audiences. The major challenge is identifying and mapping organisations and individuals relevant to each programme area and then building co-operation with the key organisations and individuals.

Transitions

WIEGO has successfully addressed many challenges in the past five years, which saw the replacement of all five of the Programme Directors as well as the replacement of WIEGO’s founder and first International Coordinator. The Board has agreed that in the coming financial year, the three-person Senior Management Team will be increased to a five-person team in order to ensure that the International Coordinator has the support she needs to continue to lead WIEGO.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

Strong financial and operational systems have been devised and implemented. These are managed by the WIEGO Office in Manchester, UK, which comprises an Operations Director, Company Secretary/Financial Controller, two Senior Finance Officers, three Finance Officers, an Events and Logistics Manager, an HR Officer and an Administrative Assistant.

6. STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSIBILITIES FOR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Directors' Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law.

Under company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and of our net incoming resources for that period. In preparing these financial statements, the Directors are required to:

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charitable company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Directors ensure that there are appropriate financial and management controls in place sufficient to safeguard charitable funds and that these funds are used only in accordance with the conditions under which they have been made available. In addition, the Directors are responsible for ensuring the economic, efficient and effective management of WIEGO’s resources so that the benefits that should be derived from the application of charitable funds are not put at risk

The Directors confirm that, so far as they are aware, the WIEGO auditors were able to examine all relevant audit information. They have taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as Directors in order to make them aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that WIEGO’s auditors may examine that information.

Political donations

WIEGO made no political donations and had no such expenditure.

Financial Risk Management

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The financial risk management and policies are conservative. Hedge accounting is not used and the exposure of the company to price risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and cash flow risk is low.

Number of employees

The average number of persons employed by the company in each week during the financial year has been 8.

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP continues as the auditor of WIEGO following a competitive tender during 2018.

The organisation completed a competitive tender exercise this year for the period 2018/2022. Crowe were re-appointed.

This report, which incorporates the Directors’ Report, was approved by the Board of Directors on and signed on its behalf, by:

Bertha Isidore

Company Secretary

10 August 2022

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited (‘the charitable company’) for the year ended 31 March 2022 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information

The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and their environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report or the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of directors

As explained more fully in the directors’ responsibilities statement set out on page 15, the directors (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Details of the extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations are set out below.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We identified and assessed the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements from irregularities, whether due to fraud or error, and discussed these between our audit team members. We then designed and performed audit procedures responsive to those risks, including obtaining audit evidence sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charitable company operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The laws and regulations we considered in this context were the Companies Act 2006, the Charities Act 2011 together with the Charities SORP (FRS 102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charitable company’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charitable company for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were those contained within the Charities Act.

Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the Trustees and other management and inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further removed noncompliance with laws and regulations (irregularities) is from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing standards would identify it. In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of non-detection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal controls. We are not responsible for preventing non-compliance and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all laws and regulations.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Vicky Szulist Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Date 13th December 2022

19

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES (incorporating an income and expenditure account) For the year ended 31 March 2022

Note
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
Investment income
3
Charitable activities
4
TOTAL INCOME
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2021
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH 2022
10
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Total
Funds
Total
Funds

2022
$
2022
$
2022
$
2021
$
-
-
2,000
10,574
1,278
11,852
3,679
28,621,340
4,519,479
33,140,819
11,544,202
28,631,914
4,520,757
33,152,671
11,549,881
6,209,061
4,092,010
10,301,071
7,205,517
6,209,061
4,092,010
10,301,071
7,205,517
22,422,854
428,746
22,851,600
4,344,364
3,333,796
2,998,814
6,332,610
1,998,246
25,756,650
3,427,560
29,184,210
6,332,610

All activities relate to continuing operations.

The Statement of Financial Activities includes all gains and losses recognised in the year.

The notes on pages 23 to 42 form part of these financial statements.

20

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

BALANCE SHEET Registered Number: 6273538 As at 31 March 2022

Note
CURRENT ASSETS
Debtors
8
Cash at bank
CREDITORS:
Amounts falling due within one year
9
NET ASSETS
FUNDS
Unrestricted Funds
10
Restricted Funds
10
2022
$
129,744
32,101,192
32,230,936
(3,046,726)
3,427,560
25,756,650

$
29,184,210
29,184,210
2021
$ $ 161,575
6,861,602
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
2021
$ $ 161,575
6,861,602
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
6,332,610

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Directors on 10 August 2022 and signed on their behalf, by:

D Davis Director and Treasurer

21

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CASH FLOW STATEMENT As at 31 March 2022

Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash used in operating activities
15
Cash Flows from investing activities
Interest received
Net cash provided by investing activities
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the
end of the year.
ANALYSIS OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
Cash at hand
RECONCILIATION OF NET DEBT
2021
$
Cash at hand and at bank
6,861,602
2022
$
25,227,738
11,852
11,852
25,239,950
6,861,602

32,101,192
2022
$
32,101,192
Cash flow
$
25,239,590
2021
$ 4,499,755
3,679
3,679
4,503,434
2,358,168
6,861,602
2021
$ 6,861,602
2022
$
32,101,192

22

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The principal accounting policies adopted, judgments and key sources of estimation uncertainty in the preparation of the financial statements are as follows:

1.1 Basis of preparation of financial statements

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) (January 2019) – (Charities SORP (FRS102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Ireland (FRS102) and the Companies Act 2006.

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102. Assets and liabilities are initially recognised at historical cost at transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant accounting policy note.

1.2 Company information

The charity is a company limited by guarantee (registered number 6273538) which is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of the registered office is 521 Royal Exchange, Manchester, M2 7EN.

1.3 Going concern

The directors have reviewed the forecasts and budgets for the forthcoming period. The Charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly.

1.4 Company status

WIEGO Limited is a registered charitable company. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1. In the event of the company being wound up the Articles of Association indemnify the members of the council, officers and the directors against all liabilities incurred by them in their respective capacities.

1.5 Fund accounting

General funds are unrestricted funds which are available for use at the discretion of the directors in furtherance of the general objectives of the charitable company and which have not been designated for other purposes.

Restricted funds are funds which are to be used in accordance with specific restrictions imposed by donors which have been raised by the charitable company for particular purposes. The cost of raising and administering such funds are charged against the specific fund. The aim and use of each restricted fund is set out in the notes to the financial statements.

Investment income, gains and losses are allocated to the appropriate fund.

23

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1.6 Incoming resources

Voluntary income including donations, gifts, income arising from fundraising events, legacies and grants that provide core funding or are of general nature are recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability.

Income from charitable activities, including income received under contract and grants where entitlement to funding is subject to specific performance conditions, is recognised as earned (as the related goods or services are provided). Grant income included in this category provides funding to support activities and is recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability. Income is deferred when the donor has imposed conditions which must be met before the charity has unconditional entitlement or the donor has specified the funds can only be utilised in future accounting periods.

Gifts in kind received are accounted for in the Statement of Financial Activities as soon as it is prudent and practical to do so. They are valued as by the donor in the grant documentation.

Investment income is recognised on a receivable basis.

1.7 Resources expended

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and has been included under expense categories that aggregate all costs for allocation to activities. Where costs cannot be directly attributed to particular activities they have been allocated on a basis consistent with the use of the resources.

Overheads have been allocated on the above basis of allocation.

Support costs are those costs incurred directly in support of expenditure on the objects. Where costs cannot be directly attributed they have been allocated or apportioned on a fair and consistent basis.

Governance costs are those incurred in the governance of the Company’s assets and are associated with constitutional and statutory requirements.

1.8 Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

All tangible fixed assets costing more than $3,000 are capitalised.

1.9 Value added tax

Value Added Tax is not recoverable by the company and as such, is included in the relevant cost in the Statement of Financial Activities.

1.10 Foreign currencies

The charity’s financial statements are presented in US dollars which is the presentation currency. The charity’s functional currency is US dollars. The exchange rate difference from USD to GBP is expected to have little effect since we maintain USD bank accounts, from which our expenditure is also in USD.

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. Transactions in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Any gain or loss arising on translation is included in the Statement of Financial Activities. The exchange rate between sterling and the US dollar at 31 March 2022 was £1: $1.31385.

24

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1.11 Grant making policy

Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal or constructive obligation.

1.12 Interest Receivable

Interest on funds held on deposit in included when receivable and the amount can be measured reliably by the charity; this is normally upon notification of the interest paid or payable by the Bank.

1.13 Operating Leases

Operating leases are leases in which the title to the assets, and the risks and rewards of ownership, remain with the lessor. Rental charges are charged on a straight line basis over the term of the lease.

1.14 Debtors

Short term debtors are measured at transaction price, less any impairment.

1.15 Cash at bank and in hand

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash and short term highly liquid investments with short maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

1.16 Creditors

Short term creditors are measured at the transaction price after allowing for any trade discount due.

1.17 Financial Instruments

The charity only has basic financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at their settlement value with the exception of bank loans which are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.

1.18 Pensions

The charity operates a defined contribution pension scheme. Contributions are charged to wages and salaries in the Statement of Financial Activities as they become payable. The assets of the scheme are held separately from the assets of the charity.

1.19 Judgements in applying accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty

In the application of the entity’s accounting policies which are described above, the Directors are required to make judgments, estimates, assumptions about the carrying value of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The estimates and underlying assumptions are based on historical experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

25

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects the current and future periods.

In the view of the Directors, no assumptions concerning the future or estimation uncertainty affecting assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date are likely to result in a material adjustment to their carrying amounts in the next financial year

2. DONATIONS AND LEGACIES

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
Membership fees
-
-
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Membership fees
2000
INVESTMENT INCOME
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
Bank Interest
10,574
1,278
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Bank Interest
-
3,679
Total
Funds
2022
$
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2000
Total
Funds
2022
$
11,852
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679
Total
Funds
2022
$
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2000
Total
Funds
2022
$
11,852
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679

Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679

3. INVESTMENT INCOME

26

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

4 INCOME FROM CHARITABLE ACTIVITIES
Restricted Unrestricted Total
Funds Funds Funds
2022 2022 2022
$ $ $
Ford Foundation 25,000,000 200,000 25,200,000
Sida 2,595,066 1,169,671 3,764,737
The Open Society Foundations 15,000 3,000,000 3,015,000
Echidna 2 375,000 - 375,000
IDRC Covid 19 Study 314,236 - 314,236
Anonymous donor - 141,108 141,108
Comic Relief 120,927 - 120,927
DFID 91,697 - 91,697
Wellspring Philanthropic 50,000 - 50,000
Other Income 38,130 8,700 46,830
International Labour Organisation 11,285 - 11,285
USAID 10,000 - 10,000
28,621,341 4,519,479 33,140,819
Restricted Unrestricted Total
Funds Funds Funds
2021 2021 2021
$ $ $
The William Flora Hewlett Foundation 1,970,000 4,000,000 5,970,000
Sida 1,734,848 996,517 2,731,365
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Open Society Foundations 1,085,002 333,333 1,418,335
IDRC Covid 19 Study 361,665 - 361,665
Ford Foundation 154,780 200,000 354,780
Anonymous donor - 227,314 227,314
Comic Relief 126,773 - 126,773
DFID 120,145 - 120,145
Wellspring Philanthropic 100,047 - 100,047
UN Women 44,000 - 44,000
Cities Alliance 26,982 - 26,982
FES 24,000 - 24,000
International Labour Organisation 19,887 - 19,887
Other income 12,780 6,129 18,909
5,780,909 5,763,293 11,554,202

27

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED

Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
Total Core Programmes
International Coordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
Echidna/Schwab 2
Ford Foundation - HomeNet International
Ford Foundation – Social Justice Bond –
WIEGO only
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – HomeNet
International
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – Global
Alliance
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – International
Domestic Workers Federation
Ford Foundation – Social Justice Bond NETS
– StreetNet
Hewlett Foundation - Communications
Support & Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
International Development Research Centre -
Covid 19 Study
ILO
ILO – ESCWA
Open Society Initiative - West Africa
Open Society Foundations - Child Care
OSF - Covid Response - NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Covid Response WP Brazil
Payments
to Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
Support
Total
2022
$
$
$
$
-
431,379
88,849
520,228
25,000
622,903
133,445
781,349
60,000
512,590
117,934
690,524
-
305,803
62,985
368,788
39,093
699,383
152,100
890,576
-
344,125
70,878
415,003
124,093
2,916,184
626,191
3,666,468
-
112,455
85,719
198,174
74,333
58,490
-
132,823
23,809
61,477
-
85,287
6,850
38,956
-
45,806
143,001
22,248
-
165,249
-
149,462
2,974
152,436
25,336
222,124
21,224
268,685
125,453
156,929
1,835
284,217
40,328
95,874
9,859
146,060
-
20,949
-
20,949
379,388
-
-
379,388
-
35,480
-
35,480
310,816
529,095
13,509
853,420
-
559,983
95,879
655,862
-
295,031
58,684
353,715
-
22,033
-
22,033
-
3,075
-
3,075
-
36,386
-
36,386
6,701
2,587
-
9,288
6,974
107,224
29,943
144,141
-
3,912
43
3,954
-
60,267
-
60,267

28

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED (continued)
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF- Kazakhstan Mapping
OSF- NETS Comms Conference
OSFS- Social Insurance Informal Worker
Sida Nets Support
Sida Social Protection Research (SSP)
Sida Waste Picker Project Coastal Cities
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
-
43,730
4,613
48,343
-
12,335
-
12,335
-
10,000
-
10,000
18,000
147,077
-
165,077
726,340
581,026
-
1,307,366
-
123,386
-
123,386
85,050
350,369
60,167
495,586
-
9,200
-
9,200
-
97,889
1,241
99,130
-
139,459
-
139, 459
-
(168,025)
-
(168,025)
2,096,473 7,192,717
1,011,880
10,301,071

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia, SEWA, AeT and FACCYR/CTEP this year.

Support Costs $ $
Salaries 693,863 683,478
Meeting costs/events 707 872
Consultants and professional 145,662 112,846
Rent and office costs 171,687 125,971
1,011,880 923,167
Support costs have been apportioned across core programmes according to the size of the core
programme.
2022 2021
Governance Costs $ $
Board meetings 94,046 24,432
Company secretarial 26,465 30,359
Internal Strategic Review 4,313 -
External Audit 14,635 12,417
139,459 67,208

29

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED – YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2021 (comparison only)

Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics and Research
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
International Co-ordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
FES- SP/IW Law in African Covid 19
Ford Foundation - Homenet Intern’nal
Hewlett Foundation - Comms/FR
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE Data/Fin
IDRC – Covid 19 Study
ILO/ILO ESCWA
Open Society Foundations – Columbia
OSF - Child Care Project
OSF - Covid Response NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Waste Pickers Brazil
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF - Social Insurance IW
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics and Research
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
International Co-ordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
FES- SP/IW Law in African Covid 19
Ford Foundation - Homenet Intern’nal
Hewlett Foundation - Comms/FR
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE Data/Fin
IDRC – Covid 19 Study
ILO/ILO ESCWA
Open Society Foundations – Columbia
OSF - Child Care Project
OSF - Covid Response NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Waste Pickers Brazil
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF - Social Insurance IW
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
Payments to
Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
Support
costs
Total
2021
$
$
$
$
-
331,728
65,802
397,530
-
528,523
104,838
633,361
-
342,597
67,958
410,555
-
375,739
74,532
450,271
-
708,734
140,585
849,319
-
446,767
88,621
535,388
-
2,734,088
542,336
3,276,424
-
206,073
48,998
255,071
17,194
19,166
-
36,360
65,386
83,800
-
149,186
32,979
76,016
452
109,447
20,287
60,805
1,870
82,962
-
24,000
-
24,000
-
5,087
-
5,087
-
33,297
-
33,297
52,702
92,914
964
146,580
-
420,887
78,854
499,741
-
36,164
19,499
55,663
-
244,295
47,252
291,547
-
9,592
-
9,592
-
7,015
-
7,015
40,000
-
-
40,000
5,000
13,059
2,800
20,859
53,120
339,883
28,042
421,046
-
139,733
-
139,733
-
19,637
3,257
22,894
18,000
33,264
-
51,264
7,180
3,590
-
10,770
592,513
466,839
52,562
1,111,964
76,150
309,051
56,928
442,129
-
42,386
1,614
44,000
-
800
-
800
-
-
37,739
37,739
980,512
2,481,330
331,833
3,793,674
-
67,208
-
67,208
-
(186,857)
-
(186,857)
980,512
5,301,838
923,167
7,205,517

30

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia and SEWA this year.

6. NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING) RESOURCES

This is stated after charging:
2022
$
Operating lease rentals – property
13,086
Auditors' remuneration – Audit fees excluding VAT
2021
$ 18,939
10,889

7. STAFF COSTS, STAFF NUMBERS AND THE COST OF KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONEL

Staff costs were as follows:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs
2022
$
524,676
32,535
8,568
565,779
2021
$ 488,001
29,826
7,946
525,773

The key management personnel of the charity are Sally Roever, International Co-ordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and her salary is determined by the Board. She currently resides in the US. Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where rates of remuneration are set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee. The total cost of the key management personnel of the charity were $216,126 (2021 $212,872).

The average monthly number of employees during the year was as follows:

2022 2021
Number Number
Administration 8 8

During the year, the directors did not receive any reimbursement of expenses (2021: $0).

The directors received no remuneration or director fees during the year.

8. DEBTORS

Grant income receivable
Prepayments and other debtors
2022
2021
$
$
60,536
124,735
69,207
36,840
129,743
161,575

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

9. CREDITORS: Amounts falling due within one year

Accrued expenses
Grants Rec’d in Advance
2022
2021
$
$
1,046,726
690,567
2,000,000
-
3,046,726
690,567

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

Carried
Brought Forward Incoming Resources Transfers Forward
1 April 2021 Resources Expended 31 March 2022
$ $ $ $ $
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Assembly Reserves 240,000 - - 80,000 320,000
DFID WOW Project 50,000 - - (50,000) -
Undesignated funds
Free reserves 500,744 - - 31,635 532,379
Unrestricted Funds 33,790 - - 50,000 83,790
Ford Foundation 200,000 200,000 (400,000) - -
Hewlett Foundation 1,974,280 - (1,974,280) - -
Sida - 1,169,671 (1,169,671) - -
Anonymous - 141,108 (141,108) - -
Open Society - Core Funding - 3,000,000 (396,972) (80,000) 2,523,028
Other Income/Other Classes - 9,978 (9,978) - -
Total Unrestricted Funds 2,998,814 4,520,757 (4,092,009) 1,635 3,459,197
RESTRICTED FUNDS
Ford Foundation SJB WIEGO - 25,000,000 (1,097,720) - 23,902,280
Comic Relief 89,021 120,927 (142,319) - 67,629
DFID WOW (3,703) 91,697 (87,994) - -
Echidna/Schwab 45,805 - (45,805) - -
Echidna/Schwab 2 - 375,000 (165,249) - 209,752
Ford Foundation HomeNet International 149,693 - (152,436) - (2,743)

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Hewlett Communications Support & FR 36,703 - (36,703) - -
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2 1,084,398 - (656,699) - 427,699
Hewlett Foundation COVID Response 853,420 - (853,420) - -
IDRC - COVID-19 Study 70,118 314,236 (353,715) - 30,639
ILO/ ILO ESCWA 10,297 11,285 (21,581) - -
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 3,954 - (3,954) - -
Open Society Foundation - Kazakhstan 43,969 - (12,335) (31,635) -
Mapping
Open Society Foundation - DW Social 111,991 - (48,343) - 63,648
Protection in Asia
Open Society Foundation - Social Insurance 215,247 - (165,077) - 50,170
Informal Workers
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 60,267 - (60,267) - -
WP Brazil
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 144,141 10,000 (154,141) - -
NETS Communications
Open Society Foundation - Child Care 5,002 5,000 (9,288) - 714
Rebuilding Project
Open Society Initiative West Africa 100,000 - (36,386) - 63,614
Sida Nets Support 143,586 1,462,591 (1,306,481) - 299,696
Sida Waste Picker Coastal Cities 107,581 557,177 (517,927) - 146,831
Sida Social Protection - 575,298 (123,386) - 451,912
Wellspring Philanthropic Fund (WPF) 62,308 50,000 (99,130) - 13,178
USAID - 10,000 (10,000) - -
Other Income - 48,704 (48,704) - -
Total Restricted Funds 3,333,796 28,631,914 (6,209,061) (31,635) 25,725,017
TOTAL FUNDS 6,332,610 33,152,671 10,301,071 - 29,184,210

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (for comparison only)

UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Reserves
General Assembly in 2022
DFID WOW project
Undesignated funds
Free Reserves
Unrestricted Funds
Hewlett Foundation
Sida
Anonymous donor
Open Society Foundations – Core Funding
DFID WOW Counterpart
Other Income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Unrestricted Funds
Cities Alliance – Liberia & SV
Comic Relief
Commonwealth Foundation
DFID WOW
Echidna/Schwab
FMO
Brought Forward
1 April 2020
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Carried
Forward
31 March 2021
$
$
$
$
$
160,000
-
-
80,000
240,000
50,000
-
-
-
50,000
-
-
460,744
-
-
40,000
500,744
33,790
-
-
-
33,790
-
200,000
-
-
200,000
-
4,000,000
(1,905,720)
(120,000)
1,974,280
-
924,880
(924,880)
-
-
-
227,314
(227,314)
-
-
-
333,333
(333,333)
-
-
-
71,637
(71,637)
-
-
-
9,808
(9,808)
-
-
704,534
5,766,972
(3,472,692)
-
2,998,814
7,866
26,982
(34,848)
-
96,762
126,773
(134,514)
89,021
(20,973)
120,145
(102,875)
(3,703)
128,767
-
(82,962)
45,805
-
24,000
(24,000)
-
-
70,000
(33,297)
36,703

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE, Database & FT
International Labour Organisation Childcare
Research
International Labour Organisation (Dakar)
Open Society Foundation – Kazakstan
Open Society Foundation – MLE
Open Society Foundation – DW SP Asia
Open Society Foundation – Social Insurance
Open Society Foundation – Care Givers
Colum
Open Society Foundation – Admin Law
SidaNets Support
SidaWaste Coastal Cities
USAID
UNDP
World Health Organisation
World Health Organisation Kenya
Other income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Restricted Funds
TOTAL FUNDS
686,887
900,000
(502,489)
-
1,084,398
55,780
-
(55,780)
-
-
-
1,000,000
(146,580)
-
853,420
-
361,665
(291,547)
-
70,118
-
425,000
(421,046)
-
3,954
43,969
-
-
-
43,969
134,885
-
(22,894)
-
111,991
116,511
150,000
(51,264)
-
215,247
7,015
-
(7,015)
-
-
-
200,000
(139,733)
-
60,267
-
165,000
(20,859)
-
144,141
-
45,002
(40,000)
-
5,002
-
100,000
-
-
100,000
-
1,256,269
(1,112,681)
-
143,588
26,243
478,579
(397,243)
-
107,579
-
44,000
(44,000)
-
-
-
100,047
(37,739)
-
62,308
-
154,780
(5,087)
-
149,693
-
19,887
(9,591)
-
10,297
-
14,780
(14,780)
-
-
1,283,712
5,782,909
(3,732,825)
-
3,333,796
1,988,246
11,549,881
(7,205,517)
-
6,332,610

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Period Amount Objective
Designated funds $320,000 Funds set aside as a contribution towards the
General Assembly in 2020.
Unrestricted funds
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation 23/03/2020- 23/03/2022 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 50,000,000 To support the core activities
Open Society Foundations 01/07/2021-30/09/2022 $3,000,000 To provide general operating support
Ford Foundation 01/10/20-30/09/22 $400,000 To provide general operating support
Hewlett Unrestricted 01/04/22 – 01/04/24 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation June 2019 – June 2023 £500,000 To provide general operating support
Restricted Funds
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 63,000,000 To provide support to the WIEGO Network of
informal workers’ associations
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 24,000,000 Waste Pickers as environmental agents
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
SEK 5,000,000 Direct Support to Social Protection programme
Hewlett Foundation 23/03/20 – 23/03/22 $70,000 To provide support to WIEGO communications
Support and Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2 2/12/19 - 2/12/22 $1,800,000 To establish Urban Livelihood Learning Hubs in
Mexico, Senegal and Ghana
Hewlett Foundation 04/09/20-23/03/22 $1,000,000
Covid Response
IDRC 1/7/20 - 30/06/22 CAD 941,500 Covid 19 Study
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/09/22 $200,000 Social Protection for domestic workers
Open Society Foundations 1/11/19 – 1/11/22 $300,000 Social Insurance – Informal Workers
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $50,000 Mapping in Kazakhstan
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $40,000 Monitoring, Learning and Evaluation
Open Society Foundations 05/08/21 – 26/10/21 $10,000 Nets Communications Conference, to
strengthen the communications capacity of
vulnerable workers for global networks of
informal workers.
Open Society Foundations 01/06/20-31/05/21 $425,000 Covid Response
Open Society Foundations 26/10/20- 26/10/21 $165,000 Covid Response NETS Communications
Open Society Foundations 01/10/20-01/10/22 $ 50,002 Child Care Rebuilding Project to document the
experience of shared business ownership
models for worker-run and managed childcare
services during the pandemic
Open Society Initiative for West Africa 20/12/20 – 19/07/22 $200,000 To strengthen women and informal sector
workers’ leadership and representation in time
of crisis and post.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable 12/12/19-30/09/21 $150,000 Develop Quality Standards for child care
services in Africa
Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable
CC2
01/01/2022 – 31/12/23 $375,000 Support the adoption of gender-sensitive
childcare guidelines across markets in Africa
and the promotion of childcare service
Comic Relief 1/9/19 - 30/8/24 £505,000 Empowering Women Home-Based Workers
DFID WoW Project 1/3/19 – 31/1/21 £498,752 HBW – Organising for Economic Empowerment
USAID 25/8/18 - 31/12/21 $20,000 The Development Innovations Group
Ford Foundation – HNI 01/01/21 – 31/12/22 £500,000 Core support for HomeNet International
Ford Foundation – SJB 01/05/2021 – 30/04/26 $25,000,000 Build resilience, stabilise and strengthen
WIEGO and the NETS
Wellspring Philanthropic 01/10/20 – 30/06/22 $150,000 Support women IE, Relief, Recovery &
Resilience
International Labour Office 01/01/21 – 31/07/21 $28,097 Database of Home Based Workers
International Labour Office 22/03/21- 28/02/22 $10,250 ILO Informality report Statistical advisor
contract
Unrestricted Funds
Restricted Funds
Total of Funds
Balance
at
1 April
2021
$
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
Incoming
Resources
$
4,520,757
28,631,914
33,152,671
Resources
Expended
Transfers
$
$
(4,092,010)
31,635
(6,209,061))
(31,635)
(10,332,707)
-
Balance at
31 March
2022
$
3,459,196
25,725,017
29,184,212

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Current assets
Creditors due within one year
Total of Funds
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
24,260,441
7,970,496
561,079
2,485,647
23,699,362
5,484,849
Total
Funds
2022
$
32,230,936
3,046,726
29,184,210

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Current assets
Creditors due within one year
Total of Funds
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
3,660,460
3,362,717
(326,664)
(363,903)
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610

11. COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE

The company is a company limited by guarantee. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1 who have each guaranteed to contribute £1 ($1.40) to the company’s assets in the event of the company being wound up. The company is controlled by the members.

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

12. RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES

According to its Articles of Association, three members of the WIEGO Board should be elected representatives from Institutional Members of WIEGO. From time to time, WIEGO enters into partnership on specific projects with its Institutional Members, including those represented on the WIEGO Board. In addition, Individual Members of WIEGO on the Board and co-opted Board members may have involvement with partner organisations. The WIEGO Board and management agree that in the interest of transparency, such activities and/or relationships should be disclosed in the financial statements.

The WIEGO Board notes that the following Board members have working involvement in organisations that have partnered with WIEGO. In each case, the named trustee or officer was neither directly associated with the project nor in receipt of any compensation related to it.

Mirai Chatterjee is a Trustee of Lok Swasthya SEWA Trust (LSST). Payments to LSST were $60,454 USD during the year. Mirai is also the Director of the Social Security team at the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA). No direct payments were made to Social Security SEWA.

Payments were also made to SEWA Bharat of $167,349, to the Indian Academy of SEWA of $86,227 and to Gujarat Mahila Housing Trust of $18,323 during the year.

Elizabeth Tang is General Secretary (remunerated) of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF). Payments to IDWF were $250,000 USD during the year.

Uma Rani is a Senior Economist (remunerated) at the International Labour Office (ILO). WIEGO received grants from the ILO of $11,285 USD during the year.

Gabriela Calandria is a member of the International Council for StreetNet. Payments to StreetNet International were $743,762 USD during the year.

Patrick Ndovlu is a remunerated employee of Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $178,031 during the year.

Caroline Skinner the Programme Director for Urban Policies is a Board member for Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $178,031 during the year.

13. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS

At 31 March 2022 the Charity had future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating leases as follows:

Payable:
Within one year

Between two and five years

Land & Buildings
2022
2021
$
$ 13,086
14,204
39,258 4,735
52,344
18,939

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NOTES TO THE FINANIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

14. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS 2022
2021
$
$
Financial assets
Financial assets measured at amortised cost 32,230,936 7,023,177
Financial liabilities
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
3,046,726 690,567
Financial assets consist of cash, grant income receivable and other debtors.
Financial liabilities consist of trade creditors, other creditors and accruals.
15. RECONCILIATION OF NET MOVEMENT TO NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
2022 2021
$ $
Net incoming/(outgoing) resources for the year 22,851,600 4,344,364
Adjustments for:
Interest received (11,852) (3,679)
Decrease/(increase) in debtors 31,832 104,996
Increase/(decrease) in creditors 2,356,158 54,075
Net cash used in operating activities 25,227,738 4,499,755

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NOTES TO THE FINANIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

16. COMPARATIVE SOFA FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2022

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Note
2021
$
2021
$
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
2,000
-
Investment income
3
-
3,679
Charitable activities
4
5,780,909
5,763,293
TOTAL INCOME
5,782,909
5,766,972
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
3,732,825
3,472,692
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
3,732,825
3,472,692
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
2,050,084
2,294,280
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2020
1,283,712
704,534
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH 2021
10
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
3,679
11,544,202
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
3,679
11,544,202
11,549,881
7,205,517
7,205,517
4,344,364
1,988,246
6,332,610

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APPENDIX 1 For the year ended 31 March 2021

----- Start of picture text -----
MEMBERSHIP
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chair [Mirai Chatterjee, India]
FINANCE
MANAGEMENT
COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
[Debra Davis, UK]
[Mirai Chatterjee, India]
[Barbro Budin, Sweden]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[Luciana Itikawa, Brazil]
[Uma Rani, Switzerland]
[Gabriela Calandria, Uruguay] [S ll R It l ]
PROGRAMME SUPPORT & COMMUNICATIONS SECRETARIAT
OPERATIONS OFFICE
Programme Strategy Advisor [Rhonda Douglas] International Coordinator [Sally Operations Director [Mike Bird]
Communications Advisor [Demetria Tsoutouras] Roever] Financial Controller/Company Secretary [Jacqui Fendall]
FOCAL CITIES INITIATIVE
Coordinator [Jenna Harvey]
5 x City Coordinators [Accra, Dakar, CORE PROGRAMMES RESEARCH COORDINATOR
Delhi, Lima, Mexico] [Françoise Carr é , USA]
LAW SOCIAL ORGANIZATION & URBAN POLICIES STATISTICS
PROTECTION REPRESENTATION Advisory Committee
Ad i C itt Advisory Committee
Programme Director
[Marlese v Broembsen] Programme Director Programme Director Programme Director
[South Africa] [Laura Alfers] Programme Director [Caroline Skinner] [Françoise Carr é]
[South Africa] [Jane Barrett] [South Africa]
[USA]
[South Africa]
----- End of picture text -----*

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Year in Review

Mirai Chatterjee, Chair of the Board

As we celebrate our 25th anniversary this year, we look toward the next quarter-century with hope and inspiration in the midst of ongoing challenges. While pandemic lockdowns have eased, food and fuel prices have skyrocketed; while workers are earning again, they have not overcome the effects of the COVID-19 crisis. Conflict and climate change are with us as never before. Yet we continue to pursue our vision of a just recovery for all workers: one in which all workers are included and central to government and other efforts at rebuilding livelihoods with social protection, and central to rebuilding local and national economies.

When this financial year started in April 2021, my country, India, was experiencing a public health crisis of unimaginable proportions. The women worker leaders who stepped in to deliver food and medicine, to comfort others in moments of loss, to mobilize their collectives by any means to do what they could for their members showed why societies must learn to value women workers and prioritize their voices. There will be no recovery otherwise.

A quarter-century ago when WIEGO was founded, very few people took notice of the informal economy. We have come a long way since then. This year, we saw our worker-leaders featured in major media outlets and invited to speak to policy audiences all over the world. Our network members have come together to define joint policy positions and have seen their uptake. There is more awareness of the need for universal social protection and its particular importance to workers in informal employment. The mobilization among WIEGO Network members for the ILC General Discussion on Social Protection is yet another significant step forward in our struggle for rights, recognition and representation. We have made tangible progress since the onset of the crisis, and we are getting stronger and better every day.

As we begin to see more of each other in person again, we are grateful for the bonds we share. Soon, we will gather together at our eighth General Assembly to affirm our strategic direction and commitment to the mission we share. We look forward to this moment of renewal and celebration, and to deepening the connections with all of our members, partners and allies.

Mirai Chatterjee Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors October 2022

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2022

Sally Roever, International Coordinator

After adapting to crisis circumstances and responding to the urgent needs of workers and their organizations, in the past year we have settled into new ways of working and sharpened our focus on centring the voices of workers in economic recovery debates. The increasing visibility of our Network in those debates has helped shift ground in a significant way, at an important moment.

Our Network brought a united voice to discussions on social protection at the International Labour Conference, calling for direct representation of organizations of workers in informal employment and highlighting the needs of self-employed workers. Tireless advocacy and direct interventions on the part of our Network’s representatives resulted in an outcome document that names workers in informal employment and will shape global work on social protection for years to come. Other strategic interventions on social protection followed later in the year, including a new project challenging economic orthodoxies that undermine universal social protection.

Pandemic response work that we began last year with members and partners culminated in the dissemination of relevant, timely data on COVID-19’s impact on different sectors of informal employment. As the pandemic and its effects evolved in different ways across countries and continents, our research traced the impact pathways for different worker groups, showing how workers coped with livelihood loss and displacement – and identifying their priorities for recovery. The findings have been used in dialogue forums to inform government recovery approaches.

In November, the WIEGO Network’s relevance to the future of work was recognized through a five-year, USD25 million grant from the Ford Foundation. The grant will build sustainability across the movement as WIEGO and the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers solidify governance structures, build capacity on critical functions, and strategically support affiliates. The growth and strengthening across our networks are evident as we expand our voice in global spaces that shape the possibilities for a more just future of work. One of many examples came in early March, when our efforts to support waste pickers resulted in a UN environmental resolution mentioning informal recyclers for the first time.

In the background of this work was an internal strategic review process to inform our next five-year plan. At the outset of the year we defined eight strategy-level questions related to scope and orientation, which helped us explore and define WIEGO’s priorities for the future. We engaged in an in-depth consultation process drawing on perspectives from our team, Board, institutional and individual members, and external stakeholders. The resulting five-year strategic plans will be reviewed at our eighth General Assembly, to take place in Mexico in November 2022.

We are, as ever, so grateful for our team, members, partners and allies in the struggle for a just and inclusive world of work.

In solidarity,

Sally Roever, PhD International Coordinator, WIEGO October 2022

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2022

WIEGO Celebrates 25 Years

The year before WIEGO’s 1997 formation, the ILO Convention on Home Work (C177) was passed, and this milestone sowed the seeds for WIEGO’s birth. The statistics that contributed to the advocacy process at the global level were provided by founders who still play key roles in WIEGO’s research work.

While WIEGO today far exceeds the expectations of our founders, the mutual support that heralded our foundation has been there from the beginning. The home-based worker movement, through the SelfEmployed Women’s Association (SEWA), was crucial to our formation. The WIEGO Network has grown from the 10 specialists on the informal economy who came together in 1997 into a movement that embraces WIEGO, the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers. WIEGO is now a 74-person team, and our Network’s institutional members represent more than 5 million people in 94 countries. Direct WIEGO activities take place in close to 60 countries across six continents.

The founding group constituted:

The specialists shared a common concern in 1997: that official statistics do not represent and mainstream policymakers do not adequately understand the contribution of workers in informal employment, especially women workers, to national economies. As a result, little attention was paid to how policies affect women workers or how their situation could be improved. The group planned a collaborative project that would promote a better understanding and appreciation of women in informal employment. The project’s goals were to promote better statistical accounting and research, stronger organizations and networks, and supportive policies and programmes for women in informal employment. The founders named the project “Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing” (or WIEGO for short).

Highlights on the Road to 25

Here are some of the global-level highlights along the way to 25 years and, for a fuller picture including national and regional organizing milestones and victories, see www.wiego.org/news/wiego-turns-25.

1997: WIEGO Founded

In April 1997, a group of 10 specialists on the informal economy – organizers, researchers, statisticians and practitioners – met to plan a collaborative project in support of women workers in the informal economy.

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2002: StreetNet International Founded, Informal Employment Statistics Published by WIEGO and ILO

StreetNet International was founded in South Africa in November 2002, with support from SEWA and WIEGO. Through its constitution, StreetNet International ensures that women street vendors are represented in all events and leadership structures. That same year, WIEGO and the ILO collaborated to publish Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture , which compiled available national data on informal employment for the first time.

2003: Organizing Workers in Informal Employment

WIEGO and a coalition of trade unions and organizations, including the Ghana Trades Union Congress, HomeNet Thailand, the Nigerian Labour Congress, SEWA and StreetNet International, met in Ahmedabad, India, to discuss organizing workers in informal employment. WIEGO subsequently supported the convening of global conferences to organize waste pickers, domestic workers and homebased workers in 2008, 2011 and 2015, respectively.

2009: Global Study on the Impact of the Economic Crisis on Workers

In 2009 and 2010, WIEGO led a study of the impact of the global economic crisis on urban workers, carried out by organizations of workers in informal employment in a dozen cities across low and middleincome countries. Drawing on this experience, WIEGO led another global study across 12 cities in 2020– 2021 to understand the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on workers in informal employment.

2011: Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers Adopted

In June 2011, after a five-year campaign, the International Labour Conference adopted Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers. The Convention mandates that domestic workers be recognized as workers entitled to the same protections as other workers.

2013: International Domestic Workers Federation Founded

In October 2013, the International Domestic Workers Network was transformed into a formal federation at its founding congress in Uruguay. At the Congress, WIEGO facilitated the ratification of the Constitution and the election of the leadership.

2015: ILO Recommendation 204 on Formalization Adopted

The landmark ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy contains many provisions that leaders of workers in informal employment and WIEGO advocated for over three years. These included provisions recognizing that informal livelihoods should be preserved during the transition to formality, and that workers in informal employment need regulated access to public space and to natural resources to pursue their livelihoods.

2018: First Global Estimates of Informal Employment Published

WIEGO’s Statistics Programme worked with the International Labour Organization as it compiled the first-ever global estimates of informal employment. In 2018, the research was published by the ILO in Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture (3rd edition) and summarized in WIEGO’s Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Brief.

2021: Launch of HomeNet International

The February 2021 launch of HomeNet International was the culmination of two decades of organization building. Home-based workers’ organizations from four regions continued to build a democratic, representative global network through the COVID-19 pandemic. WIEGO supported the network’s formation with capacity building, knowledge generation, statistics and networking.

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2022: Waste Pickers Recognized in UN Environmental Resolution

Informal recyclers were mentioned for the first time in a United Nations environmental resolution, in the fifth session of the UN Environment Assembly in Kenya, February 28–March 2, 2022. The text says their contribution in collecting, sorting and recycling plastics in many countries is recognized, and it further calls for learning from the best practices in informal and cooperative settings.

Working to Ensure Millions of Workers Have a Seat at the Table

On November 16, 2021, the Ford Foundation announced a five-year USD25 million grant to the WIEGO Network. An interactive Guardian Labs article, “More Than 2 Billion Workers Make Up the Informal Economy,” accompanied the announcement to highlight the size and significance of the informal economy and to raise the visibility of the membership-based organizations fighting for improved livelihoods for workers in informal employment. News of the funding announcement was covered by TIME, Fast Company and other news outlets.

Sarita Gupta, director of the Ford Foundation’s Future of Work(ers) programme, said:

“We know there can be no global recovery without informal workers. This grant recognizes the importance of ensuring billions of informal workers have a seat at the table to have their voices, demands and needs heard at the national and global levels, so policymakers and business leaders recognize their contributions and value.”

HomeNet International Celebrates its First Anniversary

Home-based workers and their allies launched a global network in February 2021. As it marked its first anniversary this year, HomeNet International officially registered as an observer at the 110th Session of the International Labour Conference. This marks a milestone in securing home-based workers’ ability to speak for and represent themselves at the ILC, and for visibility of the sector among governments, unions and employers attending the conference.

The global network of home-based workers is working with WIEGO to develop statistical briefs on countries outside Asia. There is a focus on other regions because the regional network is strong and visible, particularly in South Asia. HomeNet International and WIEGO believe that bringing visibility to home-based work in other regions will help the network build solidarity within the movement.

While the will to form a global movement is decades old and the work towards it many years in the making, HomeNet International’s ability to celebrate an anniversary was never taken for granted. As HNI’s International Coordinator Janhavi Dave told us, there was an international network of home-based workers 25 years ago, but it “didn't succeed. Unfortunately, it wasn’t very democratic, and many of our sister organizations walked out of it.”

It is very different this time, Janhavi said. “We’re all part of the same family. Be it SEWA, be it HomeNet South Asia, now HomeNet International, WIEGO, all of us have worked together to build this movement and push the movement forward. This partnership that we built – and the process that we built it with – is a very democratic one.”

Women Fighting the Same Fight

Janhavi’s sentiments are echoed by the other leaders of global organizations that WIEGO works with. Elizabeth Tang, General Secretary of IDWF, told us: “Being part of the WIEGO Network, we know we are in a much larger movement – a much larger family of informal workers, who are women, who are fighting the same fight for recognition, for rights, for social protection. We are together with home-based workers, street vendors, waste pickers.”

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StreetNet International Coordinator Oksana Abboud said that “WIEGO has connected us with likeminded organizations and institutions, providing the space for building international solidarity among all workers engaged in informal employment. We use WIEGO’s research and databases in our advocacy work.”

Kabir Arora, who coordinates the Alliance of Indian Waste Pickers and supports the outreach of the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers in Asia, described the moment that Soledad Mella, President of the Asociación Nacional de Recicladores de Chile and Global Alliance of Waste Pickers representative, took the podium at the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-5.2) in Nairobi, Kenya, in February 2022: “We did what we had come for and represented the hopes and aspirations of millions of waste pickers.”

Cross-Sector Work Grows

While the work of WIEGO’s programmes to support different sectors of workers in the informal economy are highlighted in this report, our work increasingly reaches across sectors and this is building solidarity among all workers in informal employment.

For example, the Statistics Programme at WIEGO has continuously compiled data to show the large number of workers in informal employment across sectors and countries. Data in the hands of workers has helped to build unity and solidarity. Through an ongoing regional collaboration in Arab countries supported by the Ford Foundation, WIEGO, the ILO, the ILO-MENA regional office and UNESCWA are developing labour statistics with a focus on informality. In 2021, a project report assessed the labour force surveys and the social protection programmes related to employment in the pilot countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and Tunisia) as a basis for developing a questionnaire for labour force surveys. Qualitative and quantitative testing of the questionnaire will be next. The project contributes to improving statistics on informality and on the main groups of workers of concern to WIEGO. The project also facilitates the region’s contribution to the ILO Working Group for the Revision of Statistical Standards on Informality, of which WIEGO’s Statistics team are members.

In another show of cross-sectoral unity and solidarity, the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers, HomeNet International, IDWF and StreetNet International participated in the 109th Session of the International Labour Conference in June 2021, along with WIEGO and SEWA. The main aim of this group was to guarantee that social protection needs of workers in informal employment were reflected in the adopted conclusions of the discussion.

Also, WIEGO is working with Swedish Sida to develop research that deepens the link between social protection and economic recovery and brings new evidence to bear on longstanding debates. Three relationships in particular are being explored: the contribution of social spending to economic recovery, the link between social protection and labour market dynamics, and the role for capital and employers in the financing of social protection. Additionally, with the International Centre for Tax and Development (ICTD), the project explores the realities of taxation from the perspective of workers in informal employment.

The launch of the inaugural WIEGO School this year is the exciting outcome of a longstanding process. The School is a major milestone, drawing together the sectors as well as our programmes, and our allies are enthusiastic about its potential. As Oksana told us, “WIEGO has so much expertise and can train on how to organize and how to negotiate for those in informal employment. At the same time, we will draw closer together for the sake of our joint constituency, which is informally employed workers.”

Seizing the Moment from COVID-19

The majority of the global workforce – 61 per cent – is informal and has been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and by the accompanying economic downturn. We are seizing the moment as the global community considers how to rebuild a more equitable and fair world.

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WIEGO, alongside membership-based organizations of the working poor, monitored the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on workers in informal employment around the world. In mid-2021, interviews were conducted with the same domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and market traders, and waste pickers in 11 cities as in the mid-2020 surveys to assess if they had recovered. We talked to workers in Accra (Ghana), Ahmedabad (India), Bangkok (Thailand), Dakar (Senegal), Delhi (India), Durban (South Africa), Lima (Peru), Mexico City (Mexico), Pleven (Bulgaria), New York City (USA) and Tiruppur (India). Seventy per cent of the study respondents were women, broadly reflecting the gender composition of the four sectors. The 2021 findings suggest that the economic fallout of the COVID-19 crisis remains deep and persistent for workers at the base of the economy. The level of indebtedness that workers have been forced into means the COVID-19 crisis is far from over. Since the pandemic began, 52 per cent of respondents drew down on their savings, 46 per cent borrowed money, and 17 per cent sold or pawned assets to get by. The vast majority (82 per cent) of respondents who had drawn down on savings since the beginning of the pandemic were unable to replace any of the savings by mid2021. WIEGO has drawn lessons from the pandemic and, with our allies, is continuing advocacy work for a just economic recovery with renewed vigour.

Where WIEGO Worked in 2021-2022*

Argentina Bangladesh Brazil Bulgaria Cambodia Chile Colombia Costa Rica Democratic Republic of the Congo Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Ethiopia France Germany Ghana Guatemala Honduras India Indonesia Jordan Kenya Laos Lebanon Malawi Mexico Morocco Nepal Nicaragua Niger Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Senegal

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Sierra Leone South Africa Spain Tanzania Thailand Togo Tunisia Uganda Uruguay USA Vietnam Zambia Zimbabwe

WIEGO’s Key Programmes

The Statistics Programme collaborates with official statisticians to improve statistical methods that will make visible the size and significance of the informal economy and the situation of all informal workers, and to prepare the data in formats that are accessible to a wide set of users.

The Organization & Representation Programme helps organizations of workers in informal employment build their organizational and leadership capacity, connect to each other and align with allies as they fight to improve the working conditions of their members.

The Law Programme strives for the recognition, inclusion and protection of the rights and work of workers in informal employment in international instruments, national and local laws and regulations. It works to build the capacity of workers in informal employment and their organizations to use the law to fight for secure livelihoods and labour rights.

Workers in informal employment need access to social protections that will protect and mitigate risks to their incomes and help them cope after an event or shock. The Social Protection Programme is committed to helping workers in informal employment access these rights.

By working with leaders of workers in informal employment, policymakers and urban practitioners, the Urban Policies Programme strives to help the urban poor achieve better incomes, more secure places to live and work, and the capacity to negotiate sustainable gains in urban policies and practices.

How WIEGO Supports Domestic Workers

Meet Norma Palacios

Norma is one of the founders and leaders of SINACTRAHO, a domestic workers’ union in Mexico. She has been a domestic worker for 27 years and, while she recognizes that she is tired and “has fears, like any other human being,” she finds strength in this movement.

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SINACTRAHO works to raise awareness of domestic workers’ economic and labour situation and strives to empower its members to demand and exercise their rights as workers.

“Most of the time you work in a place where the employer’s house is your workplace, but you can be alone all day long and you have no contact with other people with whom you identify. We do see that these relationships can develop when, perhaps, they work in the same building, when they establish a friendship, but we see that when they come to the union they become stronger.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the historic effort to ensure domestic workers’ long-term well-being became even more pressing. As well as advocating for social security, the union offered legal counselling to domestic workers who faced exploitative employment relations or were fired without justification during the crisis.

“Doing all these things during the pandemic showed us that we can achieve everything. It also strengthened me a lot: when we have these encounters with authorities I know we carry with us the voice of us as domestic workers […] We have to hold on to all these women to move forward.”

How WIEGO Programmes Support Domestic Workers

Organization & Representation Programme

After developing a toolkit on Convention 189, WIEGO facilitated negotiation skills training for domestic worker organizations. Experiences from this were shared by IDWF affiliates in a November 2021 workshop with the ILO commemorating C189. Beginning in October 2021, IDWF affiliates from 10 African countries took part in a six-month-long WIEGO online training on democratic leadership in trade unions. Participants said the course helped them to realize the importance of understanding and implementing their unions’ constitutions and to revise them appropriately to address the situation of domestic workers.

Statistics Programme

The Statistics Programme’s unique contribution is to improve the identification of domestic workers – and home-based workers, street vendors, market traders and waste pickers – in official statistics and to prepare statistics on these groups in accessible formats for use by membership-based organizations (MBOs), global networks of workers in informal employment, and allied policy advocates. International statistics work makes possible global statistical briefs such as the ILO-WIEGO-IDWF brief on domestic workers. It also informs WIEGO’s preparation of briefs at the national, urban and city levels on informal employment. Briefs for Chile and Senegal include trend information on each group, including domestic workers, and facilitate work to improve the situation of these workers.

Law Programme

With the aim of legally empowering domestic workers so that they can realize their rights and respond to violations by employers, WIEGO held meetings this year with workers’ organizations in Tanzania and South Africa. Domestic workers’ struggles include limited legal awareness and access to legal services, uneven legal protection, non-compliance by employers, difficulty in organizing, and poor enforcement. WIEGO’s legal empowerment work aims to train domestic workers on legal issues, thereby increasing their access to justice. By empowering domestic workers themselves to know and use the law – equipping them with legal knowledge, and negotiation and mediation skills – the work aims to break the barriers to access to justice, including the hierarchical relationship between legal professionals and workers that can prevent the latter from seeking redress. Ultimately, the work with IDWF affiliates will embed, through a training-of-trainers model, a culture of legal empowerment in their organizations so that all members are able to know, use and shape the law to secure their rights.

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Social Protection Programme

With the IDWF, WIEGO produced a series of policy briefs on domestic workers and social protection in South Asia. These looked at the barriers domestic workers face in accessing social protection and public services, as well as the costs they carry in order to access these services. For example, domestic workers in India said they were paying the equivalent of three weeks of earnings to visit a health care centre. About 70 per cent of workers reported having to take out a loan to finance their last health visit. In Tamil Nadu, domestic workers said they lack knowledge about their entitlements, lack documentation for registration, and migrant workers are excluded from welfare provisions. The cost of applying for a social security benefit for the typical domestic worker in our survey was 1.5 times her weekly earnings. Domestic worker organizations in South Asia are using this research in their local-level organizing and advocacy.

Urban Policies Programme

WIEGO’s COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study monitored workers’ hardships, loss of jobs and inability to recover earnings by mid-2021. The study found that, among domestic workers, “live-out” domestic workers were more likely to lose their jobs and struggle to regain them, whereas “live-in” workers experienced deteriorating working conditions. Both types of domestic workers reported a weakening of their bargaining power with employers. In Mexico City, SINACTRAHO, the national union of domestic workers, used study results on food insecurity and loss of income to engage the Mexican Congress on the long-standing demands of domestic workers.

How WIEGO Supports Street Vendors and Market Traders

Meet Oksana Abboud

“2022 marks the 20th anniversary of StreetNet International since its establishment in Durban, South Africa,” notes Oksana, International Coordinator of StreetNet, the global alliance of street and market vendors.

“WIEGO played a key role in the creation of StreetNet. WIEGO’s leadership at the time recognized the crucial need for an international umbrella to unite and support street vendors around the world.”

With the rapid growth in technology globally, street vendor organizations should position themselves to take advantage of this with new approaches and strategies, Oksana says.

“We might see integration of street vendors into digital platforms, with vendors finding their niche in using the technology for sustainability, development and livelihood purposes.”

She believes that a shift could be coming, with street vendors gaining more recognition and respect for their human and workers’ rights and their role as economic players. StreetNet is growing – expanding its borders and attracting new members, and WIEGO gives the movement recognition and confidence at international and other levels, she says.

“It means a lot to be part of a global network for the vulnerable, for the unrecognized – and to be part of such a highly respected network with a high level of organization ... It empowers us and brings us into more unity. We feel part of a big family.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Street Vendors and Market Traders

Organization & Representation Programme

The implementation of ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy is an ongoing WIEGO priority. In the spirit of that transition, five towns across two provinces in South Africa have established a formal relationship between street vendor representatives and council officials. In October 2021, the two parties held a policy dialogue where public-space guidelines were launched, and they signed a joint declaration of commitment to practical interventions to improve the vendors’ working conditions. These and other achievements in which WIEGO played a key role have generated more media coverage and created the potential for significant shifts in workers’ material conditions.

Statistics Programme

The programme prepared briefs at the national, urban and city levels on main worker groups, including street vendors and market traders, for Chile and Senegal. The Chile brief was presented to representatives of unions and federations of street vendors, waste pickers, domestic workers and homebased workers, the Workers United Centre of Chile and a representative of the metropolitan region’s Ministry of Labour and Social Provision. Worker organizations noted how important it is to have statistics for their advocacy and to bring visibility.

Law Programme

WIEGO’s Administrative Justice project aims to provide people working in public space with the knowledge and skills to defend their rights against violations by public authorities, and the ability to demand access to and participate meaningfully in law and policymaking processes. In Senegal and Ghana, the Law Programme mapped institutions and stakeholders involved in the regulation and management of public space and interviewed public authorities and vendors to assess regulations that govern access to space and its implementation on the ground. The study’s theme was law and the distribution of power and entitlements in the urban space from the vantage point of street and market vendors. Also, WIEGO’s analysis of COVID-19 in seven Asian countries shows that laws and policies do not recognize informal traders as legitimate economic actors or the role that informal food vendors play in promoting food security. WIEGO’s analysis of the pandemic laws that regulated informal work in 16 countries in Latin America generated similar conclusions.

Social Protection Programme

In response to growing needs highlighted by the COVID-19 crisis, the Social Protection Programme expanded its regional advocacy for income protection this year. The adoption of the African Union’s Protocol on Social Protection in February 2022 was cause for celebration as WIEGO has worked with partners, including StreetNet International, to ensure that this legally binding instrument directly includes workers in informal employment in policy making, among other demands. The fact that the African Union now has a single binding instrument that addresses a broad range of social protection issues sets a clearer direction for regional advocacy. Also in Africa, a notable gain for street vendors and other workers in informal employment operating in public space was made when the South African Local Government Association (SALGA) drew on WIEGO’s child-care work with Asiye eTafuleni to include child-care provision in their Public Space Trading Guidelines, 2021-2026.

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Urban Policies Programme

The Urban Policies Programme has worked this year on securing inclusive planning practices and policy in a range of contexts and countries. In New York City, UPP partnered with the Street Vendor Project on the COVID-19 impact study and together they jointly identified lessons in advocacy that have global relevance. Also, WIEGO’s work in local-level experimentation with urban planning and design and legal frameworks was profiled in the United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) Gold VI Report, which documents public-space trading innovations in Durban, South Africa, and Delhi, India, as well as institutionalized social dialogue in Lima, Peru.

How WIEGO Supports Waste Pickers

Meet Coura Ndiaye

Coura is an honorary leader among waste pickers in the Mbeubeuss dumpsite, about 30 kilometres away from Dakar, capital of Senegal. People generally call her “Mother Coura” out of respect for her age and the number of years she has worked as a waste picker.

In 2000, Coura joined the Association of Waste Pickers of Mbeubeuss, known as Bokk Diom, and she later led the association. She is a firm believer in the importance of being organized – particularly for women – in order to defend waste pickers’ livelihoods and improve their working conditions.

This is particularly crucial as the government has so far refused to include waste pickers in its current solid waste management project, or at least guarantee their means of subsistence, Coura says. The restructuring of the dumpsite led by the waste management agency is affecting women waste pickers’ working conditions and safety.

“For example, the road they built to get to the platform, this road is the cause of the flooding. Because this road is very high, if it rains, it flows directly onto us.”

She says Bokk Diom needs to become stronger and improve communication between leaders and members to tackle the challenges and needs. The waste pickers also need help from the government’s waste management agency to improve their working conditions at the dumpsite, which would increase their income, Coura says.

“The state should help us and not the other way around. We are the first in this dumpsite, and we are the most legitimate to benefit from the dumpsite.”

How WIEGO Programmes Support Waste Pickers

Organization & Representation Programme

The Organization & Representation Programme supported progress towards the establishment of a global organization of waste pickers this year, concluding with ongoing discussions of a draft Constitution and discussions of issues that have helped build a sense of common purpose. Early in 2022, WIEGO coordinated a delegation of waste picker MBOs to participate in the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi, Kenya, in support of a global plastics treaty. A significant victory was achieved when the UNEA-5.2 resolution recognized waste pickers as recyclers of plastics in informal and cooperative settings. Waste picker representatives will take their proposals to the next Intergovernmental Negotiations Committee meeting on plastic pollution. The Organization & Representation Programme also has focused on empowering MBOs to engage governments and the private sector on Extended Producer Responsibility policies and regulations. In South Africa, this led to an agreement in principle about payment to waste pickers for their environmental services.

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Statistics Programme

The identification of waste pickers through national surveys presents special problems. However, national survey data are a useful starting point. Waste Pickers in Brazil: A Statistical Profile (WIEGO Statistical Brief No. 29), published in English and Portuguese in November 2021, provides statistics on the extent of waste picker employment in the country, urban areas and major cities, as well as waste pickers’ characteristics and working conditions. The Programme is working with the WIEGO team and members of the waste picker community to improve methods for collecting data on these workers.

Law Programme

In the Waste Pickers and Human Rights Project, WIEGO and partners petitioned the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights for the right to work to include workers in informal employment and for a thematic hearing on the rights violations of waste pickers in seven Latin American countries. While the hearing was not granted, the team was invited to meet with the commissioners and will petition again for a hearing. The Law Programme did capacity building with waste pickers to enable the workers to present arguments in front of the commission, and collaboration is continuing. Also, the Administrative Justice stream of work is strengthening its focus on R204, which provides a comprehensive model of formalization that recognizes the socio-economic contributions of workers in informal employment and promotes the adoption of enabling regulatory frameworks and strategies that prioritize their needs. The next phase adopts a strong cross-sectoral approach, involving organizations of waste pickers, who share the struggle for access and meaningful use of public space.

Social Protection Programme

With WIEGO support, the Movement of Excluded Workers (MTE) – a member of Unión de Trabajadores y Trabajadoras de la Economía Popular (UTEP) – in Argentina developed an innovative programme through their child-care and after-school centres to support children who experienced abuse during the COVID-19 lockdown periods. UTEP-MTE were able to adapt their child-care services rapidly to respond to the needs of waste pickers, street vendors, garment workers and community workers represented in the union.

Urban Policies Programme

Through the CataSaúde Viraliza project in Brazil, WIEGO enhanced worker capacity to reduce risks and secure gains. By the end of July 2021, more than 400 waste pickers had completed the online capacitybuilding project that sought to provide waste pickers with a deeper understanding of decent work conditions and health and safety protocols. Participants represented all five regions of Brazil. The CataSaúde Viraliza project focused on strengthening alliances with both organized and non-organized waste pickers, by drawing on the expertise of multiple partners and research activists. For several of these partners, this was the first time they had worked together to help bridge understandings among both groups of waste pickers. In Belo Horizonte, WIEGO celebrated 10 years of the Gender and Waste Project with an e-book launch where women waste picker leaders reflected on gains made in working to build gender awareness in the National Waste Pickers Movement (MNCR) and local cooperatives.

How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams Support Workers in Informal Employment

WIEGO’s Focal Cities approach supports organizations of workers in informal employment to engage with government officials to secure more inclusive laws and regulations, improved urban services and a voice in urban planning and policymaking processes. WIEGO’s five Focal Cities are Accra, Ghana; Dakar, Senegal; Delhi, India; Lima, Peru; and Mexico City, Mexico.

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Accra, Ghana

The team works with market traders , street vendors , waste pickers and market porters .

In Accra, the Focal Cities team’s work focused on securing progressive national child-care guidelines. These were developed through a participatory process that brought together parents of children in market-based day-care centres, informal trade organization representatives, child-care workers, officials from the Department of Social Welfare and the Department of Children, an urban planning specialist, an early childhood care and development expert and a legal consultant. The guidelines, which integrate the concerns of workers in informal employment, fill a gap in Ghana’s regulatory framework for childcare centres in markets. Market trade represents 40 per cent of women’s employment in Greater Accra and urban Ghana.

Dakar, Senegal

The team works with market traders , street vendors , prepared meals vendors and waste pickers .

WIEGO’s work in Dakar supporting waste pickers from the Mbeubeuss dumpsite has a growing focus on promoting a just transition that would secure their livelihoods as the government implements a World Bank-funded project to restructure and eventually close the dumpsite – the Promotion of Integrated Waste Management and the Economy of Solid Waste (PROMOGED). Working with the National Confederation of Workers of Senegal (CNTS), WIEGO’s launch of the findings of the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study resulted in a public pledge of inclusion in PROMOGED from the President of Senegal and a promise by the head of PROMOGED to improve working conditions. To boost the capacities of Bokk Diom – the organization of waste pickers in Mbeubeuss – to defend their rights and position themselves within waste management, WIEGO and Bokk Diom developed research on alternative livelihoods and jointly engaged in organizational strengthening efforts. In December 2021, supported by WIEGO and the ILO, waste pickers from Bokk Diom successfully formed a cooperative, and they are also in the process of creating a union.

Delhi, India

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors and waste pickers and focuses on inclusion of issues affecting workers in informal employment in cross-sectoral urban discourses.

WIEGO and its partners in Delhi saw the culmination of several years of joint advocacy when the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) released its draft Delhi Master Plan 2041 in 2021. For the first time, the informal economy is recognized as the city’s largest employer, and the plan contains enabling language for the integration of workers in informal employment. To achieve this change, the Focal Cities Delhi team supported a broad-based campaign – the Main Bhi Dilli (“I, Too, am Delhi”) coalition of diverse worker groups and civil society organizations – to influence the Delhi Master Plan as a “people’s plan” with supportive measures for housing, livelihood and social infrastructure. After the draft was released, the coalition successfully advocated for an extension of the public comment period to allow for broader citizen participation. It also supported grassroots leaders in organizing 250 meetings with worker groups across Delhi, and helped facilitate the submission of 25,000 comments from workers in informal employment and community groups across Delhi to the DDA.

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For the year ended 31 March 2022

Lima, Peru

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors , waste pickers , canillitas /newspaper vendors and market porters .

Our central focus this year was to implement COVID-19 impact research and support MBOs in making their voices heard regarding recovery. Following the launch of the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study in Lima, newly elected President Pedro Castillo mentioned the pandemic’s effects on workers in informal employment and announced a programme that would satisfy a key demand. In his July 28, 2021 inaugural speech, Castillo announced measures of financial support to micro and small enterprises. The measures included state-guaranteed credit with longer grace periods, refinancing of debt and special credit support to women entrepreneurs. Access to credit of small amounts and affordable interest rates have been key workers’ demands coming out of the study.

Mexico City, Mexico

The team works with domestic workers , street vendors , waste pickers and non-salaried workers, including mariachi musicians, coffee vendors, shoe shiners and organ players.

In Mexico City, the team continued engaging Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH) on informal worker issues and supporting workers in filing complaints with the commission regarding evictions, confiscations and destruction of property. The commission’s bulletin highlighted the importance of non-salaried work and called on all decision makers to avoid the use of stigmatizing and offensive language in relation to those who carry out this work. The commission called attention to the fact that in Mexico, “more than 90 per cent of paid domestic work operates informally, despite the existence of a mechanism for labour and social security regulation.”

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Company Registration No: 6273538

Charity Registration No: 1143510 DRAFT

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE)

For the year ended 31 March 2022

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CONTENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Page
Legal and administrative information 1 - 2
Directors’ report 3 - 16
Independent Auditors' report 17 - 19
Statement of financial activities 20
Balance sheet 21
Cash Flow Statement 22
Notes to the financial statements 23 - 42
Appendices 43 - 58

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2022

Name:

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited

Charity Registration No: Company Registration No: Principal and Registered Address

1143510

6273538

521 Royal Exchange Manchester M2 7EN United Kingdom

Telephone: Website:

0161 819 1200 www.wiego.org

Names of Current Directors

The Directors of WIEGO, which is a charitable company, are its trustees for the purposes of charity law. Throughout this report the Directors are collectively referred to as the Board.

Mirai Chatterjee (Chair) Debra Davis (Treasurer) Barbro Budin Lin Lim Lean William (Biff) Steel Gabriela Calandria Luciana Fukimoto Itikawa Uma Rani Elizabeth yin Ngor Tang Patrick Sibusiso Ndlovu

Chief Executive Officer (known as International Co-ordinator)

Sally Roever

Company Secretary

Bertha Isidore (August 25, 2022)

Bankers

Santander UK Bank plc Manchester Business Centre 298 Deansgate Manchester M3 4HH

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

LEGAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION For the year ended 31 March 2022

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Solicitors

Bates Wells and Braithwaite 2 – 6 Cannon Street London EC4M 6YH

Programme Team

Sally Roever Jane Barrett Marlese von Broembsen Rhonda Douglas Laura Alfers Mike Rogan Caroline Skinner Francoise Carré

International Co-ordinator Programme Director, Organization & Representation Programme Director, Law Programme Strategy Advisor Programme Director, Social Protection Interim Programme Director, Urban Policies Programme Director, Urban Policies Programme Director, Statistics

Operations Team Sally Roever International Co-ordinator Bertha Isidore Company Secretary Rhonda Douglas Programme Strategy Advisor Mike Bird Operations Director Megan Landeros Research and Administrative Assistant to the International Co-ordinator Carol Clayman Executive Assistant to International Coordinator

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Board of Directors of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Ltd presents the Directors’ Annual Report for the year end 31st March 2022.

1. STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT

WIEGO’s structure, governance and management are illustrated by the organogram in Appendix 1.

Structure

WIEGO is a charity registered in England and Wales (No. 1143510) and is constituted as a company registered in England and Wales and limited by guarantee (No. 6273538). The Directors, officers and advisors of the organisation during 2021-22 are listed on page 1 and 2. The company was established under a Memorandum of Association which established the objects and powers of the company and is governed under our Articles of Association. Revised governing documents of WIEGO conforming to the Companies Act 2006 and the decisions of the General Assembly in April 2010 were accepted by the Board and lodged with Companies House in July 2011. In the event of the company being wound up members are not required to contribute an amount exceeding £1.

All WIEGO funds are received and managed by the Operations Office of WIEGO in Manchester, UK.

As at the end of the financial year, more than twelve institutional funders provided financial support for WIEGO including a five year grant from the Ford Foundation of $25 million, over $3.7 million from Sida and $3 million from the Open Society Foundations. WIEGO also received grants from Echidna/Schwab, IDRC, Comic Relief, DFID, Wellspring Philanthropy, International Labour Organisation and USAID.

Governance

WIEGO is governed by a 10-person Board of Directors. The Directors are the Members of the Company and also the trustees of WIEGO as a registered charity. The Board ensures that WIEGO’s activities carry into effect the Charity’s object. Its work includes setting the strategic direction; scrutinising performance, quality and finances; and agreeing the financial strategy and operational budgets. The Board meets at least three times a year either physically, by teleconference, or by electronic means. In the current year, given the circumstances of the pandemic, there was one video conference meeting of the Board and two teleconference meetings.

WIEGO’s Board of Directors is comprised of three representatives of membership-based organizations of informal workers (one of whom serves as the Chair); two representatives each from the other two constituencies of WIEGO (researchers and development professionals); and three other persons coopted by the Board as needed to carry out the functions of the Board.

The Board was re-constituted during the four-yearly General Assembly that was held in Johannesburg in November 2018. Four of the previous Board of Directors were nominated and elected by the membership of the wider WIEGO network at this General Assembly and three new Directors were appointed. Three other members were co-opted by the Board thereafter. The Board has representation from Africa, Latin America and Asia as well as Europe and North America. A full term for any Director is four years and Directors may be re-elected or re-appointed to serve for a further term in any given office. The Board represents all WIEGO members between General Assemblies in accordance with WIEGO’s Articles of Association.

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DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

The International Coordinator speaks regularly with the Chair of the Board, the Treasurer and other Directors to ensure that they are all kept fully informed. Delegated decisions made at other levels of WIEGO are regularly reported to the Board and its Committees to ensure Directors have full information to fulfil their roles. The Board is supported in its work by the Management Committee, the Finance Committee and other ad hoc committees and working groups as required. The Human Resources Sub Committee of the Management Committee considers and makes recommendations regarding human resource issues. Committee reports are a standing agenda item for the Board of Directors meetings.

The Management Committee consists of five members including four Directors and the International Coordinator. The Management Committee is chiefly responsible for overseeing the programmes and policies of WIEGO. The core programmes of WIEGO (Social Protection, Organisation and Representation, Urban Policies, Statistics and Law) are each led by a Programme Director. Reports are received from the Programme Directors of these programme areas by the International Coordinator and the Management Committee, together with reports from the Company Secretary, Programme Strategy Advisor, Regional Advisors, the Research Coordinator and the Operations Director.

The Finance Committee reports to the Board of Directors and consists of six members, comprising three Directors, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller/Company Secretary and the Operations Director. It convenes at least four times a year to consider reports from, among others the Treasurer, the International Coordinator, the Financial Controller (who also serves as Company Secretary) and external auditors. The Finance Committee is responsible for reviewing and monitoring all aspects relating to the preparation and production of the annual financial statements of WIEGO. Specifically, in terms of annual statutory accounts, this includes consideration of accounting policies, levels of disclosure, risk management policies, compliance with applicable corporate governance requirements, and reviewing any relevant matters relating to annual financial statements raised by the external auditors as a result of audit work. The Finance Committee recommends the audited financial statements to the Board of Directors for approval. It makes recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditors and approves their remuneration and terms of engagement. It reviews the performance and reports the results of external auditors’ work annually to the Board.

Since our incorporation, WIEGO has undergone considerable change and expansion. This change and expansion has required an extensive updating of our management and operations processes and procedures. As this organisational development has progressed, WIEGO has ensured that our governance arrangements are appropriate, effective and evolving to changed circumstances by having Directors who bring a wealth of organisational, research and professional experience to WIEGO.

The Directors are assisted by WIEGO’s International Coordinator, the Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, the Operations Director, the Financial Controller / Company Secretary. Board Members are kept informed about major issues affecting WIEGO. All Directors are aware of their legal and financial responsibility to run the company effectively and to act in its best interests.

All WIEGO Directors are also aware of their responsibility for WIEGO’s strategic direction and their responsibility to fulfil WIEGO’s objectives through assessing the organisation’s performance, ensuring the correct policies are in place and that WIEGO’s activities reflect the needs of our beneficiaries. Reflecting this responsibility, the WIEGO Board and Team monitor the implementation of the current 5- year strategic plan, which was set out in 2018.

The Directors also have access to professional advice and guidance from external advisors, including WIEGO’s external auditors, Crowe U.K. LLP, Co-operatives UK and its solicitors, Bates Wells & Braithwaite LLP.

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DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

Recruitment and Appointment

The WIEGO General Assembly in 2018 elected seven Board members from the three constituencies of members. A Nominating Committee solicits nominations from the WIEGO Membership and then proposes a slate of nominees to the Board and the General Assembly for their approval. The Nominating Committee consists of five persons, two appointed by the Board and one person elected by each constituency of the membership at the time of each quadrennial General Assembly. Elections are usually agreed by consensus but if that is not possible then by a simple majority of votes cast. In preparing the slate of nominees for the Board, from among those nominated by the membership, the Nominating Committee is guided by the principle of achieving reasonable balance on the Board as a whole and ensuring representation from each of the three membership constituencies. The Nominating Committee also takes into account the range of skills and experience required for the Board to exercise its responsibilities and to conduct its business in an efficient and effective manner to the benefit of WIEGO and its beneficiaries.

The Board also has powers to co-opt to fill vacancies. It co-opted Debra Davis, a chartered accountant with international experience as a Director and Treasurer at the time of General Assembly in 2018. Two further Directors were co-opted by the Board at its meeting on the 9[th] May 2019. One of these co-opted Directors, Elizabeth Tang, stepped down for personal reasons in December 2021, however we are hopeful that she will be able to re-join the Board in the following financial year.

Each has a commitment to WIEGO’s aims and their appointment ends at the next General Assembly, to be held in November 2022. They may be re-appointed.

nduction and training

In line with National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) guidelines, all Directors were inducted into the work of WIEGO and the legal roles and responsibilities of Directors, through briefings by the International Coordinator, the Company Secretary, the Board Chair and the Programme Directors.

Management

The Board has delegated day-to-day leadership and management of WIEGO’s affairs and the implementing of agreed policies and strategies to the International Coordinator, Sally Roever. She is assisted by a team of Programme Directors, the Programme Strategy Advisor, a Research Coordinator and an Operations Team who operate within an approved scheme of delegation (see Appendix 1). The former International Coordinator, Marty Chen, has stayed on as Senior Advisor to WIEGO and continues to support the organisation especially in the areas of research and fundraising.

The development of the organisation since 2007 has required the extension and updating of operational procedures. This is a continuing process requiring revision of the Operations Manual on occasion through 2020/21.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Equality and Diversity

In its Articles of Association, WIEGO is committed to opposing discrimination in matters of gender, race, faith, age, sexual orientation, or disability, and to operate within an equal opportunities framework. This commitment is currently applied to the delivery of WIEGO’s programme, our employment practices and for the organisation of our membership. During the previous financial year, we established a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion working group, chaired by the International Coordinator and in the 2021/22 financial year we took on a DEI partner, Emunthini Consulting based in South Africa to steer us through a process to confront and overcome the biases and power imbalances that are present within WIEGO as much as in any other institution.

Staff Involvement

WIEGO seeks to engage all employees, key contractors and members in our activities and achievements. A number of teams have been set up to improve working together and ensure delivery of results. These include the Operations Team, the Programme Team, the Communications Team, the Fundraising Team and others. There are a number of routine communication methods, notably frequent and regular emails, an intranet, skyping, teleconferences, and periodic physical meetings. All teams are kept up-to-date by the International Coordinator and via the WIEGO intranet with the activities and developments, such as Directors’ decisions after each cycle of Board and Committee meetings.

There is normally a physical meeting of the WIEGO Team each year, but we held a successful “virtual” Team Retreat in September 2022 because of the continuing restrictions on international travel. With a diverse and geographically dispersed team, it has been important to hold face-to-face meetings in order to establish a team spirit and provide an opportunity to share ideas and challenges and we hope to resume this aspect of our work in the coming financial year.

Risk Management and Internal Controls

Review of the Risk Register is delegated to both the Management Committee and the Finance Committee to support the Board in assessing and prioritising risks and risk-mitigating strategies across WIEGO. Relevant sections of the Risk Register were reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees according to their terms of reference. The Committees monitored the major risks to which WIEGO is exposed, recommended steps to mitigate risks, and oversaw the implementation of effective risk management. The two Committees report once a year to the Board on the Risk Register and the risk management strategy. The Risk Register was amended by the Finance and Management Committees in June and in November of 2022.

The Finance and Management Committees identify the operational, financial and reputational risks WIEGO faces, prioritising them in terms of potential impact and likelihood of occurrence and proposing means of mitigating the risks. With the continuing development of the risk management strategy, the Board is assured that:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Covid pandemic, and the continuing restrictions under which we have all been living, led us to consider new risks relating to the physical and mental health of the WIEGO Team and we have put in place protocols to manage these, including strict controls on face-to-face working where this is possible to undertake at all, and regular, virtual Team meetings. We have also taken steps to manage the increased risk of cyber-crime. Foreign exchange risk is also a key risk as we receive funds in USD, GBP and SEK. Currency matching and the continuing review of the impact of exchange rate fluctuations are in place. We were fortunate not to face any reduction in our ability to raise funds for WIEGO’s work during the pandemic, and in fact many of our donors contributed additional funds to enable us to respond to its impact on informal workers.

The Board recognises that, to achieve the objectives of WIEGO, the nature of our work requires acceptance of some risks which are outside our control and cannot therefore be eliminated or fully managed. Where this happens, there is active and clear monitoring of such risk. The Board is satisfied that systems are in place to monitor, manage and mitigate WIEGO’s exposure to major risks.

Internal Financial Control

The Financial Controller’s work is framed largely by WIEGO’s regulations, policies, operations manual and risk assessments. The Directors created an Operations Manual when WIEGO was incorporated to ensure the adequacy of WIEGO’s internal controls. It has been updated during the year and is reviewed regularly. Audit recommendations are systematically followed up and monitoring reports are received by the Finance Committee. The Accounting Software system used by WIEGO (Xero) provides access to financial information by budget holders and others across the globe.

The Treasurer reviews the work and ensures, through the Finance Committee and the Operations Team, that the Board and the Management Committee have confidence that:

The key procedures which the Directors have established with a view to providing effective internal control are as follows:

Each year Directors approve the annual budget taking account of the key risk areas and also of income and expenditure patterns from the previous year. Performance is monitored and relevant action taken throughout the year through the periodic reporting to the Directors of variances from budget, updated forecasts for the year and information on the key risk areas.

Key Management Personnel

The Key Management Personnel consists of Sally Roever, International Coordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and works from her home in Virginia, USA. Her salary is determined by the Board.

Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where remuneration is set according to the WIEGO remuneration policy, which is reviewed periodically by the Management Committee.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

2. OBJECTIVES, AIMS AND PUBLIC BENEFIT

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) is a global research-policy network that seeks to improve the status of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy. By doing so, our aim is to ensure in the long term the well-being of the working poor and the reduction of poverty.

The objects of the charity are set out in paragraphs 3 and 4 of WIEGO’s Articles of Association as follows:

The Company's objects are to relieve poverty: in particular, the poverty of the working poor in the informal economy caused by low earnings, high risks, and adverse working environments and conditions associated with the informal economy worldwide (including non-standard or unprotected employment for formal firms);

In carrying out its objects, the Company shall promote equality of opportunity and oppose any form of discrimination on grounds of race, ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability or religion.

In order to achieve our objects, WIEGO seeks to increase the Visibility, Validity and Voice of the working poor in informal employment:

The individuals and institutions in the WIEGO network are drawn from three broad constituencies: membership-based organizations (MBOs) of informal workers; individuals undertaking research and statistical work with regard to informal employment, and development practitioners in agencies of various types (non-governmental, governmental, and inter-governmental).

Together with our allies in the international movement of informal workers, WIEGO seeks:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Since its founding, the WIEGO network has developed several distinct features that enable us to influence mainstream perceptions, policies and institutions. First, WIEGO focuses on the concrete reality of the working poor, especially women, in the informal economy and seeks to integrate an evidenced based understanding of this concrete reality into mainstream development thinking, policies and institutions.

Second, WIEGO builds effective alliances between our three constituencies and draws on the distinct expertise of each constituency in our work:

Third, WIEGO has developed programme initiatives and technical expertise on a range of issues that address the expressed needs and concerns of informal workers. Finally, and importantly, WIEGO builds networks and partnerships by providing technical support to and working closely with membershipbased organisations of informal workers. A more detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2021/22 is provided in a separate Appendix 2.

Grant making

Our grant making policy is to work with associations within WIEGO’s wider network who share WIEGO’s objectives and are well placed to deliver effective projects. Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal constructive obligation.

Public Benefit

In preparing this report, the Directors confirm that they have complied with the duty in section 17 of the 2011 Charities Act. To the best of their ability, they took into account and consistently applied the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit, as set out in its publications “Charities and Public Benefit: the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit” and “The Prevention or Relief of Poverty for Public Benefit”.

The Charity’s object is set out in our Articles of Association as revised on 19[th] July 2011 and the Directors’ current interpretation of these is set out in this report, while the report as a whole covers WIEGO’s activities and achievements throughout the world pursuant to this object.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

3. ACHIEVEMENTS AND PERFORMANCE

A detailed account of WIEGO’s activities, achievements and performance during 2021/22 is provided as Appendix 2. WIEGO publishes an Annual Report each year for general distribution. Appendix 2 is an abridged version of that Annual Report.

Evidence of Impact

For a detailed report on impact achieved during 2021/22 please see Appendix 2.

Communications, Membership Support and Outreach

WIEGO aims to expand its network – partners, members and allies – to strengthen the collaborative activities under this network, and to extend our reach and impact. As of March 2022, WIEGO had 211 members: 39 Institutional Members and 172 Individual Members in some 45 countries.

WIEGO has strengthened membership support and outreach to provide help in building organisational capacity of the Institutional Members (all democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers) and in developing improved two-way communication with them.

WIEGO maintained our strong communications capacity during 2021/22 to help meet our goals of producing user-friendly publications and improving how we disseminate information, with an increasing focus on supporting our messaging through social media. Our long-standing Communications Manager stepped down in February 2022 and she has been replaced on an interim basis by one of the two Deputy Managers.

We have continued to respond to the need for information on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and what informal workers can do to keep safe, with new pages on the WIEGO website and health education messages disseminated via social media in 14 languages.

External Factors Affecting Achievement

Due to the international nature of our work and also our link with partners in countries across the globe, WIEGO recognises there are a number of factors which could affect achievement of our aims and objectives. Significant external factors affecting WIEGO's work and achievements included:

Economic, Policy, and Political Environment: faced by the Working Poor in the Informal Economy

While all these factors are beyond WIEGO’s control, we are able to seek the advice of international partners and experts and consult with the Board and WIEGO’s membership on how best WIEGO can play its role in support of the global movement of informal workers.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Conclusion

From our inception in 1997, WIEGO has been an organisation prepared to undertake policy research and advocacy on behalf of informal workers to increase their Voice, Visibility and Validity and thereby help to increase the well-being and relieve the poverty of the working poor, especially women. This has remained unchanged through 2021/22. WIEGO’s mission, vision and purpose have remained essentially unchanged but the breadth and depth of our activities, the size and capacity of our team, and the effectiveness of our operations and governance systems have remained robust.

4. FINANCIAL REVIEW

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in Note 1 to the financial statements and comply with the requirements of the Statement of Recommended Practice for Accounting and Reporting by Charities, the Charities Acts, and the Companies Acts.

The financial strategy for the year was developed to build on our strategy and achievements from the previous year, which were designed to ensure the sustainability and future viability of WIEGO. We reviewed the resources expended in relation to activities implemented and results achieved. We have also factored in when current grants will end, in order to carefully monitor expenditure and activities to ensure maximum benefit and minimal disruption for members and partners as we try to raise funds for our future work. During the fiscal year ending 31 March 2022, our total incoming resources were $33,152,671 (as compared to $11,549,881 in the previous year). We secured $25 million USD from the Ford Foundation which is a five-year grant, although this is recognised in this financial year due to the regulation on income recognition.

Our total expenditure was $10,301,071 (as compared with $7,205,517 in the previous year).

The overall aim of the financial strategy is to ensure that resources are used efficiently to contribute to meeting programme and project targets and achieve WIEGO’s priorities. In order to achieve our objectives, the maximum levels of resources possible are channelled to the direct benefit of programmes and to deliver necessary quality improvements in research, policy advocacy and capacity building, while maintaining prudent financial management controls over resources of WIEGO as a whole. Budgetary and financial control continues to be reviewed in order to reduce the risks of under or overspending and to mitigate the effect of a drop in income in any one financial year. This is underpinned by the building of reserves.

Going Concern

The indications at the time of writing are that WIEGO is well-placed to weather the ongoing after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and the policies that have been put in place to combat it. Since the start of the pandemic all of our major donors have been in touch to offer their support in the form of additional funding and/or extensions to grant periods and the possibility to redirect funds as necessary in order to meet new and unexpected needs as they arise.

The financial outlook for WIEGO is secure. In October 2021 we received a new five-year grant totalling US$25 million from the Ford Foundation. This is an unrestricted grant intended to support organisational strengthening work for WIEGO and also the four main international networks of informal workers that are part of the WIEGO Network. This new grant comes on top of the two and three-year extensions to the unrestricted grant agreements we signed with the Hewlett Foundation and Sida respectively at the end of the 2019/20 financial year. The respective grants agreed are for US$4 million, since increased by a further US$1 million, and the equivalent of $8.4 million.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

From an organisational point of view WIEGO is also well-placed to continue its work. Almost all of the WIEGO Team already worked from home before the pandemic and the Manchester office has been able to adapt to remote working relatively easily because our banking, financial management and payment systems are all on-line. During the pandemic we have set up systems to ensure that we are taking care of the health and well-being of the Team. We set up weekly meetings of the Manchester office team plus town hall meetings for the whole Team and liaison meetings with the leaders of the networks of informal workers that are our members. These meetings are now held monthly and continue to enable effective management and communication.

The external website and the internal intranet both have dedicated Covid-19 pages that provide effective information management for our Team and wider network.

The Operations Team has added new risks to the WIEGO risk register to cover our understanding of the potential risks to the WIEGO work programme and the health and well-being risks to the Team and this has recently been reviewed by the Finance and Management Committees of the Board. In the meantime, we have demonstrated that the work of WIEGO can continue, albeit through different kinds of activities and delivery mechanisms given the current circumstances. The view of the Directors and the WIEGO management is that the measures described above provide an effective strategy to reduce the risks to the Team.

The charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. In light of the extensions received from current donors, as well as additional funding received from the Ford Foundation for a period of five years, and measures which have been put in place to address operational risks arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Directors are of the view that there are no financial or operational uncertainties which cast doubt about the charity's ability to continue as a going concern in the foreseeable future, and that the financial statements have been prepared accordingly (Financial Statements Note 1.3).

Reserves Policy

WIEGO has built reserves to meet any adverse contingencies. The Board of Directors created reserves to:

During 2021/22 as shown in the Financial Statements, designated reserves were maintained to counter any cash flow issues and to maintain WIEGO’s core activities in the event of fundraising problems. WIEGO has reserves to make long-term commitments to projects, and to protect our work against the effects of financial fluctuations and other uncertainty. The Board of Directors seeks to have reserves at a level at which core programmes can be maintained for a 3-month period.

At present, this requires reserves of approximately $532k. From the US$25M Social Justice Bond (SJB) grant which WIEGO received from the Ford Foundation in FY 2021/22 for a period of five years, US$24M has been placed on a 95-day deposit with Santander Uk plc. currently earning interest at a rate of 1.7% per annum. The interest earned on the deposit will be shared proportionally between WIEGO’s reserves, and the reserves of the international networks of informal workers’ association. Therefore, when added to the existing free reserves, the principal plus interest from the Ford Foundation SJB grant is more than adequate to cover the amount needed for the core programmes for a 3-month period, although the necessary level of reserves is subject to regular review.

We also have $320k set aside for the General Assembly which is a meeting of our members, and a crucial part of our governance structure. This takes place every four years and we are building funds towards meeting the cost of the next General Assembly in November 2022.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The free reserves of $532k carried forward into the new financial year are to fund budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year. These reserves will be carried forward into the new financial year and will be used to fund the budgeted costs of the core programmes over the next financial year.

Investment Policy and Objectives

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

Liquidity is generally preferred over investment. Cash balances are placed in time deposits when appropriate. The board has not established formal targets for return on investment.

In order to minimise foreign exchange losses due to currency exchange rate fluctuations, our policy is to hold funds in the currency in which they are received and to expend them in the same currency wherever possible.

Principal Funding Sources

During 2021/22 WIEGO received our principal funding from the following funders:

Ford Foundation Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) Open Society Foundations Echidna/Schwab IDRC Comic Relief UK FCDO (formerly DFID) Wellspring Philanthropic Fund UN Women International Labour Organisation USAID

There are no outstanding liens against WIEGO.

WIEGO does not undertake any commercial or trading activities.

In note 12 to the Statement of Financial Activities, a declaration on related parties has been made.

Fundraising

The charity had no fundraising activities requiring disclosure under S162A of the Charities Act 2011.

5. PLANS FOR FUTURE PERIODS

Membership

WIEGO is committed to building sector-specific networks or federations of democratic, member-based organisations of informal workers (MBOs). MBOs can become institutional members of WIEGO and form one of three constituencies of membership. Individuals can become members of WIEGO as part of the researchers/statisticians constituency or the development practitioners constituency. The challenges to WIEGO with regard to our relationships with members are various, including how to:

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

The securing of a new, five-year grant from the Social Justice Bond of the Ford Foundation allows us to plan for the strengthening of the WIEGO Network and our membership with renewed confidence. The US$25 million grant is intended specifically to be used for organisational strengthening work for WIEGO and each of the four networks of informal workers that make up our institutional membership: StreetNet International, HomeNet International, the International Domestic Workers’ Federation and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers. This gives us a golden opportunity to plan for the future sustainability of the WIEGO Network as a whole.

Programmes and functions

WIEGO has five core programmes of work together with global projects and special initiatives. Across these strands of work cut four functions: research, policy advocacy, communication and capacity building. As part of the strategic review that gave rise to the current five-year strategic plan, work plans for the coming period identify the following challenges:

Allies and Target Audiences

The natural allies and target audiences for WIEGO’s work differ across the domains of our core programmes as highlighted in Appendix 2. Identifying key allies and audiences is difficult in most domains of WIEGO’s work as there are often a large number and range of actors with different perspectives. In many contexts, specific organisations can be both allies and target audiences. The major challenge is identifying and mapping organisations and individuals relevant to each programme area and then building co-operation with the key organisations and individuals.

Transitions

WIEGO has successfully addressed many challenges in the past five years, which saw the replacement of all five of the Programme Directors as well as the replacement of WIEGO’s founder and first International Coordinator. The Board has agreed that in the coming financial year, the three-person Senior Management Team will be increased to a five-person team in order to ensure that the International Coordinator has the support she needs to continue to lead WIEGO.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

Strong financial and operational systems have been devised and implemented. These are managed by the WIEGO Office in Manchester, UK, which comprises an Operations Director, Company Secretary/Financial Controller, two Senior Finance Officers, three Finance Officers, an Events and Logistics Manager, an HR Officer and an Administrative Assistant.

6. STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSIBILITIES FOR FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Directors' Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law.

Under company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and of our net incoming resources for that period. In preparing these financial statements, the Directors are required to:

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charitable company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

The Directors ensure that there are appropriate financial and management controls in place sufficient to safeguard charitable funds and that these funds are used only in accordance with the conditions under which they have been made available. In addition, the Directors are responsible for ensuring the economic, efficient and effective management of WIEGO’s resources so that the benefits that should be derived from the application of charitable funds are not put at risk

The Directors confirm that, so far as they are aware, the WIEGO auditors were able to examine all relevant audit information. They have taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as Directors in order to make them aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that WIEGO’s auditors may examine that information.

Political donations

WIEGO made no political donations and had no such expenditure.

Financial Risk Management

WIEGO’s treasury management policy objective is to optimise returns consistent with our cash flow requirements and the overriding need to protect the capital value of WIEGO’s funds. WIEGO funds are invested only with UK Clearing Banks. Treasury management is carried out within the context of WIEGO’s statutory background and our Memorandum and Articles of Association.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

DIRECTORS REPORT

For the year ended 31 March 2022

The financial risk management and policies are conservative. Hedge accounting is not used and the exposure of the company to price risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and cash flow risk is low.

Number of employees

The average number of persons employed by the company in each week during the financial year has been 8.

Auditors

Crowe U.K. LLP continues as the auditor of WIEGO following a competitive tender during 2018.

The organisation completed a competitive tender exercise this year for the period 2018/2022. Crowe were re-appointed.

This report, which incorporates the Directors’ Report, was approved by the Board of Directors on and signed on its behalf, by:

Bertha Isidore

Company Secretary

10 August 2022

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited (‘the charitable company’) for the year ended 31 March 2022 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information

The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and their environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the strategic report or the directors’ report included within the trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of directors

As explained more fully in the directors’ responsibilities statement set out on page 15, the directors (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Details of the extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations are set out below.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We identified and assessed the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements from irregularities, whether due to fraud or error, and discussed these between our audit team members. We then designed and performed audit procedures responsive to those risks, including obtaining audit evidence sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT For the year ended 31 March 2022

We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks within which the charitable company operates, focusing on those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the determination of material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The laws and regulations we considered in this context were the Companies Act 2006, the Charities Act 2011 together with the Charities SORP (FRS 102). We assessed the required compliance with these laws and regulations as part of our audit procedures on the related financial statement items.

In addition, we considered provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but compliance with which might be fundamental to the charitable company’s ability to operate or to avoid a material penalty. We also considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within the charitable company for fraud. The laws and regulations we considered in this context for the UK operations were those contained within the Charities Act.

Auditing standards limit the required audit procedures to identify non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of the Trustees and other management and inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

We identified the greatest risk of material impact on the financial statements from irregularities, including fraud, to be within the timing of recognition of income and the override of controls by management. Our audit procedures to respond to these risks included enquiries of management about their own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities, sample testing on the posting of journals, reviewing accounting estimates for biases, reviewing regulatory correspondence with the Charity Commission and reading minutes of meetings of those charged with governance.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material misstatements in the financial statements, even though we have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance with auditing standards. For example, the further removed noncompliance with laws and regulations (irregularities) is from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing standards would identify it. In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of non-detection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of internal controls. We are not responsible for preventing non-compliance and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all laws and regulations.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Vicky Szulist Senior Statutory Auditor For and on behalf of Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor The Lexicon Mount Street Manchester M2 5NT

Date 13th December 2022

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES (incorporating an income and expenditure account) For the year ended 31 March 2022

Note
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
Investment income
3
Charitable activities
4
TOTAL INCOME
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2021
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH 2022
10
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Total
Funds
Total
Funds

2022
$
2022
$
2022
$
2021
$
-
-
2,000
10,574
1,278
11,852
3,679
28,621,340
4,519,479
33,140,819
11,544,202
28,631,914
4,520,757
33,152,671
11,549,881
6,209,061
4,092,010
10,301,071
7,205,517
6,209,061
4,092,010
10,301,071
7,205,517
22,422,854
428,746
22,851,600
4,344,364
3,333,796
2,998,814
6,332,610
1,998,246
25,756,650
3,427,560
29,184,210
6,332,610

All activities relate to continuing operations.

The Statement of Financial Activities includes all gains and losses recognised in the year.

The notes on pages 23 to 42 form part of these financial statements.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

BALANCE SHEET Registered Number: 6273538 As at 31 March 2022

Note
CURRENT ASSETS
Debtors
8
Cash at bank
CREDITORS:
Amounts falling due within one year
9
NET ASSETS
FUNDS
Unrestricted Funds
10
Restricted Funds
10
2022
$
129,744
32,101,192
32,230,936
(3,046,726)
3,427,560
25,756,650

$
29,184,210
29,184,210
2021
$ $ 161,575
6,861,602
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
2021
$ $ 161,575
6,861,602
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
6,332,610

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Directors on 10 August 2022 and signed on their behalf, by:

D Davis Director and Treasurer

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

CASH FLOW STATEMENT As at 31 March 2022

Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Net cash used in operating activities
15
Cash Flows from investing activities
Interest received
Net cash provided by investing activities
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of
the year.
Cash and cash equivalents at the
end of the year.
ANALYSIS OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
Cash at hand
RECONCILIATION OF NET DEBT
2021
$
Cash at hand and at bank
6,861,602
2022
$
25,227,738
11,852
11,852
25,239,950
6,861,602

32,101,192
2022
$
32,101,192
Cash flow
$
25,239,590
2021
$ 4,499,755
3,679
3,679
4,503,434
2,358,168
6,861,602
2021
$ 6,861,602
2022
$
32,101,192

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The principal accounting policies adopted, judgments and key sources of estimation uncertainty in the preparation of the financial statements are as follows:

1.1 Basis of preparation of financial statements

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) (January 2019) – (Charities SORP (FRS102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Ireland (FRS102) and the Companies Act 2006.

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) Limited meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102. Assets and liabilities are initially recognised at historical cost at transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant accounting policy note.

1.2 Company information

The charity is a company limited by guarantee (registered number 6273538) which is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of the registered office is 521 Royal Exchange, Manchester, M2 7EN.

1.3 Going concern

The directors have reviewed the forecasts and budgets for the forthcoming period. The Charity has contractual funding to cover the essential costs of running the organisation up to 31 March 2023 and beyond. On this basis, forecast budgets for the year ending 31 March 2023 have been prepared. The directors consider that the charity is a going concern and the financial statements have been prepared accordingly.

1.4 Company status

WIEGO Limited is a registered charitable company. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1. In the event of the company being wound up the Articles of Association indemnify the members of the council, officers and the directors against all liabilities incurred by them in their respective capacities.

1.5 Fund accounting

General funds are unrestricted funds which are available for use at the discretion of the directors in furtherance of the general objectives of the charitable company and which have not been designated for other purposes.

Restricted funds are funds which are to be used in accordance with specific restrictions imposed by donors which have been raised by the charitable company for particular purposes. The cost of raising and administering such funds are charged against the specific fund. The aim and use of each restricted fund is set out in the notes to the financial statements.

Investment income, gains and losses are allocated to the appropriate fund.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1.6 Incoming resources

Voluntary income including donations, gifts, income arising from fundraising events, legacies and grants that provide core funding or are of general nature are recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability.

Income from charitable activities, including income received under contract and grants where entitlement to funding is subject to specific performance conditions, is recognised as earned (as the related goods or services are provided). Grant income included in this category provides funding to support activities and is recognised where there is entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be measured with sufficient reliability. Income is deferred when the donor has imposed conditions which must be met before the charity has unconditional entitlement or the donor has specified the funds can only be utilised in future accounting periods.

Gifts in kind received are accounted for in the Statement of Financial Activities as soon as it is prudent and practical to do so. They are valued as by the donor in the grant documentation.

Investment income is recognised on a receivable basis.

1.7 Resources expended

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and has been included under expense categories that aggregate all costs for allocation to activities. Where costs cannot be directly attributed to particular activities they have been allocated on a basis consistent with the use of the resources.

Overheads have been allocated on the above basis of allocation.

Support costs are those costs incurred directly in support of expenditure on the objects. Where costs cannot be directly attributed they have been allocated or apportioned on a fair and consistent basis.

Governance costs are those incurred in the governance of the Company’s assets and are associated with constitutional and statutory requirements.

1.8 Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

All tangible fixed assets costing more than $3,000 are capitalised.

1.9 Value added tax

Value Added Tax is not recoverable by the company and as such, is included in the relevant cost in the Statement of Financial Activities.

1.10 Foreign currencies

The charity’s financial statements are presented in US dollars which is the presentation currency. The charity’s functional currency is US dollars. The exchange rate difference from USD to GBP is expected to have little effect since we maintain USD bank accounts, from which our expenditure is also in USD.

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rates of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date. Transactions in foreign currencies are translated into dollars at the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Any gain or loss arising on translation is included in the Statement of Financial Activities. The exchange rate between sterling and the US dollar at 31 March 2022 was £1: $1.31385.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

1.11 Grant making policy

Grants are recognised in the financial statements when they are approved or when there is a legal or constructive obligation.

1.12 Interest Receivable

Interest on funds held on deposit in included when receivable and the amount can be measured reliably by the charity; this is normally upon notification of the interest paid or payable by the Bank.

1.13 Operating Leases

Operating leases are leases in which the title to the assets, and the risks and rewards of ownership, remain with the lessor. Rental charges are charged on a straight line basis over the term of the lease.

1.14 Debtors

Short term debtors are measured at transaction price, less any impairment.

1.15 Cash at bank and in hand

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash and short term highly liquid investments with short maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

1.16 Creditors

Short term creditors are measured at the transaction price after allowing for any trade discount due.

1.17 Financial Instruments

The charity only has basic financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at their settlement value with the exception of bank loans which are measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.

1.18 Pensions

The charity operates a defined contribution pension scheme. Contributions are charged to wages and salaries in the Statement of Financial Activities as they become payable. The assets of the scheme are held separately from the assets of the charity.

1.19 Judgements in applying accounting policies and key sources of estimation uncertainty

In the application of the entity’s accounting policies which are described above, the Directors are required to make judgments, estimates, assumptions about the carrying value of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The estimates and underlying assumptions are based on historical experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from these estimates.

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects the current and future periods.

In the view of the Directors, no assumptions concerning the future or estimation uncertainty affecting assets and liabilities at the balance sheet date are likely to result in a material adjustment to their carrying amounts in the next financial year

2. DONATIONS AND LEGACIES

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
Membership fees
-
-
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Membership fees
2000
INVESTMENT INCOME
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
Bank Interest
10,574
1,278
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
Bank Interest
-
3,679
Total
Funds
2022
$
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2000
Total
Funds
2022
$
11,852
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679
Total
Funds
2022
$
-
Total
Funds
2021
$
2000
Total
Funds
2022
$
11,852
Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679

Total
Funds
2021
$
3,679

3. INVESTMENT INCOME

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

4 INCOME FROM CHARITABLE ACTIVITIES
Restricted Unrestricted Total
Funds Funds Funds
2022 2022 2022
$ $ $
Ford Foundation 25,000,000 200,000 25,200,000
Sida 2,595,066 1,169,671 3,764,737
The Open Society Foundations 15,000 3,000,000 3,015,000
Echidna 2 375,000 - 375,000
IDRC Covid 19 Study 314,236 - 314,236
Anonymous donor - 141,108 141,108
Comic Relief 120,927 - 120,927
DFID 91,697 - 91,697
Wellspring Philanthropic 50,000 - 50,000
Other Income 38,130 8,700 46,830
International Labour Organisation 11,285 - 11,285
USAID 10,000 - 10,000
28,621,341 4,519,479 33,140,819
Restricted Unrestricted Total
Funds Funds Funds
2021 2021 2021
$ $ $
The William Flora Hewlett Foundation 1,970,000 4,000,000 5,970,000
Sida 1,734,848 996,517 2,731,365
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Open Society Foundations 1,085,002 333,333 1,418,335
IDRC Covid 19 Study 361,665 - 361,665
Ford Foundation 154,780 200,000 354,780
Anonymous donor - 227,314 227,314
Comic Relief 126,773 - 126,773
DFID 120,145 - 120,145
Wellspring Philanthropic 100,047 - 100,047
UN Women 44,000 - 44,000
Cities Alliance 26,982 - 26,982
FES 24,000 - 24,000
International Labour Organisation 19,887 - 19,887
Other income 12,780 6,129 18,909
5,780,909 5,763,293 11,554,202

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED

Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
Total Core Programmes
International Coordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
Echidna/Schwab 2
Ford Foundation - HomeNet International
Ford Foundation – Social Justice Bond –
WIEGO only
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – HomeNet
International
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – Global
Alliance
Ford Foundation – SJB NETS – International
Domestic Workers Federation
Ford Foundation – Social Justice Bond NETS
– StreetNet
Hewlett Foundation - Communications
Support & Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
International Development Research Centre -
Covid 19 Study
ILO
ILO – ESCWA
Open Society Initiative - West Africa
Open Society Foundations - Child Care
OSF - Covid Response - NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Covid Response WP Brazil
Payments
to Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
Support
Total
2022
$
$
$
$
-
431,379
88,849
520,228
25,000
622,903
133,445
781,349
60,000
512,590
117,934
690,524
-
305,803
62,985
368,788
39,093
699,383
152,100
890,576
-
344,125
70,878
415,003
124,093
2,916,184
626,191
3,666,468
-
112,455
85,719
198,174
74,333
58,490
-
132,823
23,809
61,477
-
85,287
6,850
38,956
-
45,806
143,001
22,248
-
165,249
-
149,462
2,974
152,436
25,336
222,124
21,224
268,685
125,453
156,929
1,835
284,217
40,328
95,874
9,859
146,060
-
20,949
-
20,949
379,388
-
-
379,388
-
35,480
-
35,480
310,816
529,095
13,509
853,420
-
559,983
95,879
655,862
-
295,031
58,684
353,715
-
22,033
-
22,033
-
3,075
-
3,075
-
36,386
-
36,386
6,701
2,587
-
9,288
6,974
107,224
29,943
144,141
-
3,912
43
3,954
-
60,267
-
60,267

28

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED (continued)
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF- Kazakhstan Mapping
OSF- NETS Comms Conference
OSFS- Social Insurance Informal Worker
Sida Nets Support
Sida Social Protection Research (SSP)
Sida Waste Picker Project Coastal Cities
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
-
43,730
4,613
48,343
-
12,335
-
12,335
-
10,000
-
10,000
18,000
147,077
-
165,077
726,340
581,026
-
1,307,366
-
123,386
-
123,386
85,050
350,369
60,167
495,586
-
9,200
-
9,200
-
97,889
1,241
99,130
-
139,459
-
139, 459
-
(168,025)
-
(168,025)
2,096,473 7,192,717
1,011,880
10,301,071

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia, SEWA, AeT and FACCYR/CTEP this year.

Support Costs $ $
Salaries 693,863 683,478
Meeting costs/events 707 872
Consultants and professional 145,662 112,846
Rent and office costs 171,687 125,971
1,011,880 923,167
Support costs have been apportioned across core programmes according to the size of the core
programme.
2022 2021
Governance Costs $ $
Board meetings 94,046 24,432
Company secretarial 26,465 30,359
Internal Strategic Review 4,313 -
External Audit 14,635 12,417
139,459 67,208

29

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

5. RESOURCES EXPENDED – YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2021 (comparison only)

Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics and Research
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
International Co-ordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
FES- SP/IW Law in African Covid 19
Ford Foundation - Homenet Intern’nal
Hewlett Foundation - Comms/FR
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE Data/Fin
IDRC – Covid 19 Study
ILO/ILO ESCWA
Open Society Foundations – Columbia
OSF - Child Care Project
OSF - Covid Response NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Waste Pickers Brazil
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF - Social Insurance IW
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
Charitable activities
Unrestricted Funds
Core Programmes
Law
Organisation & Representation
Social Protection
Statistics and Research
Urban Policies
Focal Cities
International Co-ordination/Support
Restricted Funds
Cities Alliance - Liberia
Comic Relief
DFID WOW Project
Echidna/Schwab
FES- SP/IW Law in African Covid 19
Ford Foundation - Homenet Intern’nal
Hewlett Foundation - Comms/FR
Hewlett Foundation - Covid Recovery
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE Data/Fin
IDRC – Covid 19 Study
ILO/ILO ESCWA
Open Society Foundations – Columbia
OSF - Child Care Project
OSF - Covid Response NETS Comms
OSF - Covid Response 1
OSF - Waste Pickers Brazil
OSF - DW Social Protection Asia
OSF - Social Insurance IW
Other Classes
Sida Nets Support
Sida Waste Pickers – Coastal Cities
UN Women
USAID
Wellspring Philanthropic
Governance costs
Loss/(Gain) on foreign exchange
TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED
Payments to
Sub
grantees
Activities
Under
taken
directly
Support
costs
Total
2021
$
$
$
$
-
331,728
65,802
397,530
-
528,523
104,838
633,361
-
342,597
67,958
410,555
-
375,739
74,532
450,271
-
708,734
140,585
849,319
-
446,767
88,621
535,388
-
2,734,088
542,336
3,276,424
-
206,073
48,998
255,071
17,194
19,166
-
36,360
65,386
83,800
-
149,186
32,979
76,016
452
109,447
20,287
60,805
1,870
82,962
-
24,000
-
24,000
-
5,087
-
5,087
-
33,297
-
33,297
52,702
92,914
964
146,580
-
420,887
78,854
499,741
-
36,164
19,499
55,663
-
244,295
47,252
291,547
-
9,592
-
9,592
-
7,015
-
7,015
40,000
-
-
40,000
5,000
13,059
2,800
20,859
53,120
339,883
28,042
421,046
-
139,733
-
139,733
-
19,637
3,257
22,894
18,000
33,264
-
51,264
7,180
3,590
-
10,770
592,513
466,839
52,562
1,111,964
76,150
309,051
56,928
442,129
-
42,386
1,614
44,000
-
800
-
800
-
-
37,739
37,739
980,512
2,481,330
331,833
3,793,674
-
67,208
-
67,208
-
(186,857)
-
(186,857)
980,512
5,301,838
923,167
7,205,517

30

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Note: Sub grantees are subcontractors or institutions with contract arrangements who help to deliver the projects. Funds were allocated to IDWF, StreetNet, HomeNet South Asia, HomeNet South East Asia and SEWA this year.

6. NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING) RESOURCES

This is stated after charging:
2022
$
Operating lease rentals – property
13,086
Auditors' remuneration – Audit fees excluding VAT
2021
$ 18,939
10,889

7. STAFF COSTS, STAFF NUMBERS AND THE COST OF KEY MANAGEMENT PERSONEL

Staff costs were as follows:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs
2022
$
524,676
32,535
8,568
565,779
2021
$ 488,001
29,826
7,946
525,773

The key management personnel of the charity are Sally Roever, International Co-ordinator and Mike Bird, the Operations Director. Sally Roever is employed by WIEGO and her salary is determined by the Board. She currently resides in the US. Mike Bird is employed by WIEGO in the UK, where rates of remuneration are set according to market rates and reviewed periodically by a Management Committee. The total cost of the key management personnel of the charity were $216,126 (2021 $212,872).

The average monthly number of employees during the year was as follows:

2022 2021
Number Number
Administration 8 8

During the year, the directors did not receive any reimbursement of expenses (2021: $0).

The directors received no remuneration or director fees during the year.

8. DEBTORS

Grant income receivable
Prepayments and other debtors
2022
2021
$
$
60,536
124,735
69,207
36,840
129,743
161,575

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

9. CREDITORS: Amounts falling due within one year

Accrued expenses
Grants Rec’d in Advance
2022
2021
$
$
1,046,726
690,567
2,000,000
-
3,046,726
690,567

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WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS

Carried
Brought Forward Incoming Resources Transfers Forward
1 April 2021 Resources Expended 31 March 2022
$ $ $ $ $
UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Assembly Reserves 240,000 - - 80,000 320,000
DFID WOW Project 50,000 - - (50,000) -
Undesignated funds
Free reserves 500,744 - - 31,635 532,379
Unrestricted Funds 33,790 - - 50,000 83,790
Ford Foundation 200,000 200,000 (400,000) - -
Hewlett Foundation 1,974,280 - (1,974,280) - -
Sida - 1,169,671 (1,169,671) - -
Anonymous - 141,108 (141,108) - -
Open Society - Core Funding - 3,000,000 (396,972) (80,000) 2,523,028
Other Income/Other Classes - 9,978 (9,978) - -
Total Unrestricted Funds 2,998,814 4,520,757 (4,092,009) 1,635 3,459,197
RESTRICTED FUNDS
Ford Foundation SJB WIEGO - 25,000,000 (1,097,720) - 23,902,280
Comic Relief 89,021 120,927 (142,319) - 67,629
DFID WOW (3,703) 91,697 (87,994) - -
Echidna/Schwab 45,805 - (45,805) - -
Echidna/Schwab 2 - 375,000 (165,249) - 209,752
Ford Foundation HomeNet International 149,693 - (152,436) - (2,743)

33

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Hewlett Communications Support & FR 36,703 - (36,703) - -
Hewlett Foundation - Focal Cities 2 1,084,398 - (656,699) - 427,699
Hewlett Foundation COVID Response 853,420 - (853,420) - -
IDRC - COVID-19 Study 70,118 314,236 (353,715) - 30,639
ILO/ ILO ESCWA 10,297 11,285 (21,581) - -
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 3,954 - (3,954) - -
Open Society Foundation - Kazakhstan 43,969 - (12,335) (31,635) -
Mapping
Open Society Foundation - DW Social 111,991 - (48,343) - 63,648
Protection in Asia
Open Society Foundation - Social Insurance 215,247 - (165,077) - 50,170
Informal Workers
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 60,267 - (60,267) - -
WP Brazil
Open Society Foundation - Covid Response 144,141 10,000 (154,141) - -
NETS Communications
Open Society Foundation - Child Care 5,002 5,000 (9,288) - 714
Rebuilding Project
Open Society Initiative West Africa 100,000 - (36,386) - 63,614
Sida Nets Support 143,586 1,462,591 (1,306,481) - 299,696
Sida Waste Picker Coastal Cities 107,581 557,177 (517,927) - 146,831
Sida Social Protection - 575,298 (123,386) - 451,912
Wellspring Philanthropic Fund (WPF) 62,308 50,000 (99,130) - 13,178
USAID - 10,000 (10,000) - -
Other Income - 48,704 (48,704) - -
Total Restricted Funds 3,333,796 28,631,914 (6,209,061) (31,635) 25,725,017
TOTAL FUNDS 6,332,610 33,152,671 10,301,071 - 29,184,210

34

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (for comparison only)

UNRESTRICTED FUNDS
Designated funds
General Reserves
General Assembly in 2022
DFID WOW project
Undesignated funds
Free Reserves
Unrestricted Funds
Hewlett Foundation
Sida
Anonymous donor
Open Society Foundations – Core Funding
DFID WOW Counterpart
Other Income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Unrestricted Funds
Cities Alliance – Liberia & SV
Comic Relief
Commonwealth Foundation
DFID WOW
Echidna/Schwab
FMO
Brought Forward
1 April 2020
Incoming
Resources
Resources
Expended
Transfers
Carried
Forward
31 March 2021
$
$
$
$
$
160,000
-
-
80,000
240,000
50,000
-
-
-
50,000
-
-
460,744
-
-
40,000
500,744
33,790
-
-
-
33,790
-
200,000
-
-
200,000
-
4,000,000
(1,905,720)
(120,000)
1,974,280
-
924,880
(924,880)
-
-
-
227,314
(227,314)
-
-
-
333,333
(333,333)
-
-
-
71,637
(71,637)
-
-
-
9,808
(9,808)
-
-
704,534
5,766,972
(3,472,692)
-
2,998,814
7,866
26,982
(34,848)
-
96,762
126,773
(134,514)
89,021
(20,973)
120,145
(102,875)
(3,703)
128,767
-
(82,962)
45,805
-
24,000
(24,000)
-
-
70,000
(33,297)
36,703

35

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2
Hewlett Foundation – MLE, Database & FT
International Labour Organisation Childcare
Research
International Labour Organisation (Dakar)
Open Society Foundation – Kazakstan
Open Society Foundation – MLE
Open Society Foundation – DW SP Asia
Open Society Foundation – Social Insurance
Open Society Foundation – Care Givers
Colum
Open Society Foundation – Admin Law
SidaNets Support
SidaWaste Coastal Cities
USAID
UNDP
World Health Organisation
World Health Organisation Kenya
Other income/Other Classes/Bank Interest
Total Restricted Funds
TOTAL FUNDS
686,887
900,000
(502,489)
-
1,084,398
55,780
-
(55,780)
-
-
-
1,000,000
(146,580)
-
853,420
-
361,665
(291,547)
-
70,118
-
425,000
(421,046)
-
3,954
43,969
-
-
-
43,969
134,885
-
(22,894)
-
111,991
116,511
150,000
(51,264)
-
215,247
7,015
-
(7,015)
-
-
-
200,000
(139,733)
-
60,267
-
165,000
(20,859)
-
144,141
-
45,002
(40,000)
-
5,002
-
100,000
-
-
100,000
-
1,256,269
(1,112,681)
-
143,588
26,243
478,579
(397,243)
-
107,579
-
44,000
(44,000)
-
-
-
100,047
(37,739)
-
62,308
-
154,780
(5,087)
-
149,693
-
19,887
(9,591)
-
10,297
-
14,780
(14,780)
-
-
1,283,712
5,782,909
(3,732,825)
-
3,333,796
1,988,246
11,549,881
(7,205,517)
-
6,332,610

36

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Period Amount Objective
Designated funds $320,000 Funds set aside as a contribution towards the
General Assembly in 2020.
Unrestricted funds
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation 23/03/2020- 23/03/2022 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 50,000,000 To support the core activities
Open Society Foundations 01/07/2021-30/09/2022 $3,000,000 To provide general operating support
Ford Foundation 01/10/20-30/09/22 $400,000 To provide general operating support
Hewlett Unrestricted 01/04/22 – 01/04/24 $4,000,000 To provide general operating support
Anonymous Donation June 2019 – June 2023 £500,000 To provide general operating support
Restricted Funds
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 63,000,000 To provide support to the WIEGO Network of
informal workers’ associations
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
01/04/18 - 31/03/23 SEK 24,000,000 Waste Pickers as environmental agents
Sida – Swedish International
Development Co-operation Agency
SEK 5,000,000 Direct Support to Social Protection programme
Hewlett Foundation 23/03/20 – 23/03/22 $70,000 To provide support to WIEGO communications
Support and Fundraising
Hewlett Foundation – Focal Cities 2 2/12/19 - 2/12/22 $1,800,000 To establish Urban Livelihood Learning Hubs in
Mexico, Senegal and Ghana
Hewlett Foundation 04/09/20-23/03/22 $1,000,000
Covid Response
IDRC 1/7/20 - 30/06/22 CAD 941,500 Covid 19 Study
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/09/22 $200,000 Social Protection for domestic workers
Open Society Foundations 1/11/19 – 1/11/22 $300,000 Social Insurance – Informal Workers
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $50,000 Mapping in Kazakhstan
Open Society Foundations 1/10/18 -30/9/21 $40,000 Monitoring, Learning and Evaluation
Open Society Foundations 05/08/21 – 26/10/21 $10,000 Nets Communications Conference, to
strengthen the communications capacity of
vulnerable workers for global networks of
informal workers.
Open Society Foundations 01/06/20-31/05/21 $425,000 Covid Response
Open Society Foundations 26/10/20- 26/10/21 $165,000 Covid Response NETS Communications
Open Society Foundations 01/10/20-01/10/22 $ 50,002 Child Care Rebuilding Project to document the
experience of shared business ownership
models for worker-run and managed childcare
services during the pandemic
Open Society Initiative for West Africa 20/12/20 – 19/07/22 $200,000 To strengthen women and informal sector
workers’ leadership and representation in time
of crisis and post.

37

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

10. STATEMENT OF FUNDS (continued)

Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable 12/12/19-30/09/21 $150,000 Develop Quality Standards for child care
services in Africa
Echidna Giving/Schwab Charitable
CC2
01/01/2022 – 31/12/23 $375,000 Support the adoption of gender-sensitive
childcare guidelines across markets in Africa
and the promotion of childcare service
Comic Relief 1/9/19 - 30/8/24 £505,000 Empowering Women Home-Based Workers
DFID WoW Project 1/3/19 – 31/1/21 £498,752 HBW – Organising for Economic Empowerment
USAID 25/8/18 - 31/12/21 $20,000 The Development Innovations Group
Ford Foundation – HNI 01/01/21 – 31/12/22 £500,000 Core support for HomeNet International
Ford Foundation – SJB 01/05/2021 – 30/04/26 $25,000,000 Build resilience, stabilise and strengthen
WIEGO and the NETS
Wellspring Philanthropic 01/10/20 – 30/06/22 $150,000 Support women IE, Relief, Recovery &
Resilience
International Labour Office 01/01/21 – 31/07/21 $28,097 Database of Home Based Workers
International Labour Office 22/03/21- 28/02/22 $10,250 ILO Informality report Statistical advisor
contract
Unrestricted Funds
Restricted Funds
Total of Funds
Balance
at
1 April
2021
$
2,998,814
3,333,796
6,332,610
Incoming
Resources
$
4,520,757
28,631,914
33,152,671
Resources
Expended
Transfers
$
$
(4,092,010)
31,635
(6,209,061))
(31,635)
(10,332,707)
-
Balance at
31 March
2022
$
3,459,196
25,725,017
29,184,212

38

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Current assets
Creditors due within one year
Total of Funds
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2022
$
2022
$
24,260,441
7,970,496
561,079
2,485,647
23,699,362
5,484,849
Total
Funds
2022
$
32,230,936
3,046,726
29,184,210

ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Current assets
Creditors due within one year
Total of Funds
Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
2021
$
2021
$
3,660,460
3,362,717
(326,664)
(363,903)
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
7,023,177
(690,567)
6,332,610

11. COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE

The company is a company limited by guarantee. The members of the company are the directors named on page 1 who have each guaranteed to contribute £1 ($1.40) to the company’s assets in the event of the company being wound up. The company is controlled by the members.

39

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

12. RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURES

According to its Articles of Association, three members of the WIEGO Board should be elected representatives from Institutional Members of WIEGO. From time to time, WIEGO enters into partnership on specific projects with its Institutional Members, including those represented on the WIEGO Board. In addition, Individual Members of WIEGO on the Board and co-opted Board members may have involvement with partner organisations. The WIEGO Board and management agree that in the interest of transparency, such activities and/or relationships should be disclosed in the financial statements.

The WIEGO Board notes that the following Board members have working involvement in organisations that have partnered with WIEGO. In each case, the named trustee or officer was neither directly associated with the project nor in receipt of any compensation related to it.

Mirai Chatterjee is a Trustee of Lok Swasthya SEWA Trust (LSST). Payments to LSST were $60,454 USD during the year. Mirai is also the Director of the Social Security team at the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA). No direct payments were made to Social Security SEWA.

Payments were also made to SEWA Bharat of $167,349, to the Indian Academy of SEWA of $86,227 and to Gujarat Mahila Housing Trust of $18,323 during the year.

Elizabeth Tang is General Secretary (remunerated) of the International Domestic Workers Federation (IDWF). Payments to IDWF were $250,000 USD during the year.

Uma Rani is a Senior Economist (remunerated) at the International Labour Office (ILO). WIEGO received grants from the ILO of $11,285 USD during the year.

Gabriela Calandria is a member of the International Council for StreetNet. Payments to StreetNet International were $743,762 USD during the year.

Patrick Ndovlu is a remunerated employee of Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $178,031 during the year.

Caroline Skinner the Programme Director for Urban Policies is a Board member for Asiye e Tafuleni. Payments to Asiye e Tafuleni were $178,031 during the year.

13. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS

At 31 March 2022 the Charity had future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating leases as follows:

Payable:
Within one year

Between two and five years

Land & Buildings
2022
2021
$
$ 13,086
14,204
39,258 4,735
52,344
18,939

40

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

14. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS 2022
2021
$
$
Financial assets
Financial assets measured at amortised cost 32,230,936 7,023,177
Financial liabilities
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
3,046,726 690,567
Financial assets consist of cash, grant income receivable and other debtors.
Financial liabilities consist of trade creditors, other creditors and accruals.
15. RECONCILIATION OF NET MOVEMENT TO NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
2022 2021
$ $
Net incoming/(outgoing) resources for the year 22,851,600 4,344,364
Adjustments for:
Interest received (11,852) (3,679)
Decrease/(increase) in debtors 31,832 104,996
Increase/(decrease) in creditors 2,356,158 54,075
Net cash used in operating activities 25,227,738 4,499,755

41

WOMEN IN INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: GLOBALIZING AND ORGANIZING (WIEGO) LIMITED

NOTES TO THE FINANIAL STATEMENTS For the year ended 31 March 2022

16. COMPARATIVE SOFA FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2022

Restricted
Funds
Unrestricted
Funds
Note
2021
$
2021
$
INCOME
Donations and legacies
2
2,000
-
Investment income
3
-
3,679
Charitable activities
4
5,780,909
5,763,293
TOTAL INCOME
5,782,909
5,766,972
EXPENDITURE
Charitable activities
5
3,732,825
3,472,692
TOTAL EXPENDITURE
3,732,825
3,472,692
NET INCOMING/(OUTGOING)
RESOURCES
2,050,084
2,294,280
TOTAL FUNDS AT 1 APRIL 2020
1,283,712
704,534
TOTAL FUNDS AT 31 MARCH 2021
10
3,333,796
2,998,814
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
3,679
11,544,202
Total
Funds
2021
$
2,000
3,679
11,544,202
11,549,881
7,205,517
7,205,517
4,344,364
1,988,246
6,332,610

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APPENDIX 1 For the year ended 31 March 2021

----- Start of picture text -----
MEMBERSHIP
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chair [Mirai Chatterjee, India]
FINANCE
MANAGEMENT
COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
[Debra Davis, UK]
[Mirai Chatterjee, India]
[Barbro Budin, Sweden]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[William Steel, Ghana]
[Luciana Itikawa, Brazil]
[Uma Rani, Switzerland]
[Gabriela Calandria, Uruguay] [S ll R It l ]
PROGRAMME SUPPORT & COMMUNICATIONS SECRETARIAT
OPERATIONS OFFICE
Programme Strategy Advisor [Rhonda Douglas] International Coordinator [Sally Operations Director [Mike Bird]
Communications Advisor [Demetria Tsoutouras] Roever] Financial Controller/Company Secretary [Jacqui Fendall]
FOCAL CITIES INITIATIVE
Coordinator [Jenna Harvey]
5 x City Coordinators [Accra, Dakar, CORE PROGRAMMES RESEARCH COORDINATOR
Delhi, Lima, Mexico] [Françoise Carr é , USA]
LAW SOCIAL ORGANIZATION & URBAN POLICIES STATISTICS
PROTECTION REPRESENTATION Advisory Committee
Ad i C itt Advisory Committee
Programme Director
[Marlese v Broembsen] Programme Director Programme Director Programme Director
[South Africa] [Laura Alfers] Programme Director [Caroline Skinner] [Françoise Carr é]
[South Africa] [Jane Barrett] [South Africa]
[USA]
[South Africa]
----- End of picture text -----*

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APPENDIX 2 For the year ended 31 March 2022

The Year in Review

Mirai Chatterjee, Chair of the Board

As we celebrate our 25th anniversary this year, we look toward the next quarter-century with hope and inspiration in the midst of ongoing challenges. While pandemic lockdowns have eased, food and fuel prices have skyrocketed; while workers are earning again, they have not overcome the effects of the COVID-19 crisis. Conflict and climate change are with us as never before. Yet we continue to pursue our vision of a just recovery for all workers: one in which all workers are included and central to government and other efforts at rebuilding livelihoods with social protection, and central to rebuilding local and national economies.

When this financial year started in April 2021, my country, India, was experiencing a public health crisis of unimaginable proportions. The women worker leaders who stepped in to deliver food and medicine, to comfort others in moments of loss, to mobilize their collectives by any means to do what they could for their members showed why societies must learn to value women workers and prioritize their voices. There will be no recovery otherwise.

A quarter-century ago when WIEGO was founded, very few people took notice of the informal economy. We have come a long way since then. This year, we saw our worker-leaders featured in major media outlets and invited to speak to policy audiences all over the world. Our network members have come together to define joint policy positions and have seen their uptake. There is more awareness of the need for universal social protection and its particular importance to workers in informal employment. The mobilization among WIEGO Network members for the ILC General Discussion on Social Protection is yet another significant step forward in our struggle for rights, recognition and representation. We have made tangible progress since the onset of the crisis, and we are getting stronger and better every day.

As we begin to see more of each other in person again, we are grateful for the bonds we share. Soon, we will gather together at our eighth General Assembly to affirm our strategic direction and commitment to the mission we share. We look forward to this moment of renewal and celebration, and to deepening the connections with all of our members, partners and allies.

Mirai Chatterjee Chair, WIEGO Board of Directors October 2022

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Sally Roever, International Coordinator

After adapting to crisis circumstances and responding to the urgent needs of workers and their organizations, in the past year we have settled into new ways of working and sharpened our focus on centring the voices of workers in economic recovery debates. The increasing visibility of our Network in those debates has helped shift ground in a significant way, at an important moment.

Our Network brought a united voice to discussions on social protection at the International Labour Conference, calling for direct representation of organizations of workers in informal employment and highlighting the needs of self-employed workers. Tireless advocacy and direct interventions on the part of our Network’s representatives resulted in an outcome document that names workers in informal employment and will shape global work on social protection for years to come. Other strategic interventions on social protection followed later in the year, including a new project challenging economic orthodoxies that undermine universal social protection.

Pandemic response work that we began last year with members and partners culminated in the dissemination of relevant, timely data on COVID-19’s impact on different sectors of informal employment. As the pandemic and its effects evolved in different ways across countries and continents, our research traced the impact pathways for different worker groups, showing how workers coped with livelihood loss and displacement – and identifying their priorities for recovery. The findings have been used in dialogue forums to inform government recovery approaches.

In November, the WIEGO Network’s relevance to the future of work was recognized through a five-year, USD25 million grant from the Ford Foundation. The grant will build sustainability across the movement as WIEGO and the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers solidify governance structures, build capacity on critical functions, and strategically support affiliates. The growth and strengthening across our networks are evident as we expand our voice in global spaces that shape the possibilities for a more just future of work. One of many examples came in early March, when our efforts to support waste pickers resulted in a UN environmental resolution mentioning informal recyclers for the first time.

In the background of this work was an internal strategic review process to inform our next five-year plan. At the outset of the year we defined eight strategy-level questions related to scope and orientation, which helped us explore and define WIEGO’s priorities for the future. We engaged in an in-depth consultation process drawing on perspectives from our team, Board, institutional and individual members, and external stakeholders. The resulting five-year strategic plans will be reviewed at our eighth General Assembly, to take place in Mexico in November 2022.

We are, as ever, so grateful for our team, members, partners and allies in the struggle for a just and inclusive world of work.

In solidarity,

Sally Roever, PhD International Coordinator, WIEGO October 2022

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WIEGO Celebrates 25 Years

The year before WIEGO’s 1997 formation, the ILO Convention on Home Work (C177) was passed, and this milestone sowed the seeds for WIEGO’s birth. The statistics that contributed to the advocacy process at the global level were provided by founders who still play key roles in WIEGO’s research work.

While WIEGO today far exceeds the expectations of our founders, the mutual support that heralded our foundation has been there from the beginning. The home-based worker movement, through the SelfEmployed Women’s Association (SEWA), was crucial to our formation. The WIEGO Network has grown from the 10 specialists on the informal economy who came together in 1997 into a movement that embraces WIEGO, the International Domestic Workers’ Federation, HomeNet International, StreetNet International and the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers. WIEGO is now a 74-person team, and our Network’s institutional members represent more than 5 million people in 94 countries. Direct WIEGO activities take place in close to 60 countries across six continents.

The founding group constituted:

The specialists shared a common concern in 1997: that official statistics do not represent and mainstream policymakers do not adequately understand the contribution of workers in informal employment, especially women workers, to national economies. As a result, little attention was paid to how policies affect women workers or how their situation could be improved. The group planned a collaborative project that would promote a better understanding and appreciation of women in informal employment. The project’s goals were to promote better statistical accounting and research, stronger organizations and networks, and supportive policies and programmes for women in informal employment. The founders named the project “Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing” (or WIEGO for short).

Highlights on the Road to 25

Here are some of the global-level highlights along the way to 25 years and, for a fuller picture including national and regional organizing milestones and victories, see www.wiego.org/news/wiego-turns-25.

1997: WIEGO Founded

In April 1997, a group of 10 specialists on the informal economy – organizers, researchers, statisticians and practitioners – met to plan a collaborative project in support of women workers in the informal economy.

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2002: StreetNet International Founded, Informal Employment Statistics Published by WIEGO and ILO

StreetNet International was founded in South Africa in November 2002, with support from SEWA and WIEGO. Through its constitution, StreetNet International ensures that women street vendors are represented in all events and leadership structures. That same year, WIEGO and the ILO collaborated to publish Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture , which compiled available national data on informal employment for the first time.

2003: Organizing Workers in Informal Employment

WIEGO and a coalition of trade unions and organizations, including the Ghana Trades Union Congress, HomeNet Thailand, the Nigerian Labour Congress, SEWA and StreetNet International, met in Ahmedabad, India, to discuss organizing workers in informal employment. WIEGO subsequently supported the convening of global conferences to organize waste pickers, domestic workers and homebased workers in 2008, 2011 and 2015, respectively.

2009: Global Study on the Impact of the Economic Crisis on Workers

In 2009 and 2010, WIEGO led a study of the impact of the global economic crisis on urban workers, carried out by organizations of workers in informal employment in a dozen cities across low and middleincome countries. Drawing on this experience, WIEGO led another global study across 12 cities in 2020– 2021 to understand the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on workers in informal employment.

2011: Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers Adopted

In June 2011, after a five-year campaign, the International Labour Conference adopted Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers. The Convention mandates that domestic workers be recognized as workers entitled to the same protections as other workers.

2013: International Domestic Workers Federation Founded

In October 2013, the International Domestic Workers Network was transformed into a formal federation at its founding congress in Uruguay. At the Congress, WIEGO facilitated the ratification of the Constitution and the election of the leadership.

2015: ILO Recommendation 204 on Formalization Adopted

The landmark ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy contains many provisions that leaders of workers in informal employment and WIEGO advocated for over three years. These included provisions recognizing that informal livelihoods should be preserved during the transition to formality, and that workers in informal employment need regulated access to public space and to natural resources to pursue their livelihoods.

2018: First Global Estimates of Informal Employment Published

WIEGO’s Statistics Programme worked with the International Labour Organization as it compiled the first-ever global estimates of informal employment. In 2018, the research was published by the ILO in Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture (3rd edition) and summarized in WIEGO’s Women and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Brief.

2021: Launch of HomeNet International

The February 2021 launch of HomeNet International was the culmination of two decades of organization building. Home-based workers’ organizations from four regions continued to build a democratic, representative global network through the COVID-19 pandemic. WIEGO supported the network’s formation with capacity building, knowledge generation, statistics and networking.

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2022: Waste Pickers Recognized in UN Environmental Resolution

Informal recyclers were mentioned for the first time in a United Nations environmental resolution, in the fifth session of the UN Environment Assembly in Kenya, February 28–March 2, 2022. The text says their contribution in collecting, sorting and recycling plastics in many countries is recognized, and it further calls for learning from the best practices in informal and cooperative settings.

Working to Ensure Millions of Workers Have a Seat at the Table

On November 16, 2021, the Ford Foundation announced a five-year USD25 million grant to the WIEGO Network. An interactive Guardian Labs article, “More Than 2 Billion Workers Make Up the Informal Economy,” accompanied the announcement to highlight the size and significance of the informal economy and to raise the visibility of the membership-based organizations fighting for improved livelihoods for workers in informal employment. News of the funding announcement was covered by TIME, Fast Company and other news outlets.

Sarita Gupta, director of the Ford Foundation’s Future of Work(ers) programme, said:

“We know there can be no global recovery without informal workers. This grant recognizes the importance of ensuring billions of informal workers have a seat at the table to have their voices, demands and needs heard at the national and global levels, so policymakers and business leaders recognize their contributions and value.”

HomeNet International Celebrates its First Anniversary

Home-based workers and their allies launched a global network in February 2021. As it marked its first anniversary this year, HomeNet International officially registered as an observer at the 110th Session of the International Labour Conference. This marks a milestone in securing home-based workers’ ability to speak for and represent themselves at the ILC, and for visibility of the sector among governments, unions and employers attending the conference.

The global network of home-based workers is working with WIEGO to develop statistical briefs on countries outside Asia. There is a focus on other regions because the regional network is strong and visible, particularly in South Asia. HomeNet International and WIEGO believe that bringing visibility to home-based work in other regions will help the network build solidarity within the movement.

While the will to form a global movement is decades old and the work towards it many years in the making, HomeNet International’s ability to celebrate an anniversary was never taken for granted. As HNI’s International Coordinator Janhavi Dave told us, there was an international network of home-based workers 25 years ago, but it “didn't succeed. Unfortunately, it wasn’t very democratic, and many of our sister organizations walked out of it.”

It is very different this time, Janhavi said. “We’re all part of the same family. Be it SEWA, be it HomeNet South Asia, now HomeNet International, WIEGO, all of us have worked together to build this movement and push the movement forward. This partnership that we built – and the process that we built it with – is a very democratic one.”

Women Fighting the Same Fight

Janhavi’s sentiments are echoed by the other leaders of global organizations that WIEGO works with. Elizabeth Tang, General Secretary of IDWF, told us: “Being part of the WIEGO Network, we know we are in a much larger movement – a much larger family of informal workers, who are women, who are fighting the same fight for recognition, for rights, for social protection. We are together with home-based workers, street vendors, waste pickers.”

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StreetNet International Coordinator Oksana Abboud said that “WIEGO has connected us with likeminded organizations and institutions, providing the space for building international solidarity among all workers engaged in informal employment. We use WIEGO’s research and databases in our advocacy work.”

Kabir Arora, who coordinates the Alliance of Indian Waste Pickers and supports the outreach of the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers in Asia, described the moment that Soledad Mella, President of the Asociación Nacional de Recicladores de Chile and Global Alliance of Waste Pickers representative, took the podium at the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-5.2) in Nairobi, Kenya, in February 2022: “We did what we had come for and represented the hopes and aspirations of millions of waste pickers.”

Cross-Sector Work Grows

While the work of WIEGO’s programmes to support different sectors of workers in the informal economy are highlighted in this report, our work increasingly reaches across sectors and this is building solidarity among all workers in informal employment.

For example, the Statistics Programme at WIEGO has continuously compiled data to show the large number of workers in informal employment across sectors and countries. Data in the hands of workers has helped to build unity and solidarity. Through an ongoing regional collaboration in Arab countries supported by the Ford Foundation, WIEGO, the ILO, the ILO-MENA regional office and UNESCWA are developing labour statistics with a focus on informality. In 2021, a project report assessed the labour force surveys and the social protection programmes related to employment in the pilot countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and Tunisia) as a basis for developing a questionnaire for labour force surveys. Qualitative and quantitative testing of the questionnaire will be next. The project contributes to improving statistics on informality and on the main groups of workers of concern to WIEGO. The project also facilitates the region’s contribution to the ILO Working Group for the Revision of Statistical Standards on Informality, of which WIEGO’s Statistics team are members.

In another show of cross-sectoral unity and solidarity, the Global Alliance of Waste Pickers, HomeNet International, IDWF and StreetNet International participated in the 109th Session of the International Labour Conference in June 2021, along with WIEGO and SEWA. The main aim of this group was to guarantee that social protection needs of workers in informal employment were reflected in the adopted conclusions of the discussion.

Also, WIEGO is working with Swedish Sida to develop research that deepens the link between social protection and economic recovery and brings new evidence to bear on longstanding debates. Three relationships in particular are being explored: the contribution of social spending to economic recovery, the link between social protection and labour market dynamics, and the role for capital and employers in the financing of social protection. Additionally, with the International Centre for Tax and Development (ICTD), the project explores the realities of taxation from the perspective of workers in informal employment.

The launch of the inaugural WIEGO School this year is the exciting outcome of a longstanding process. The School is a major milestone, drawing together the sectors as well as our programmes, and our allies are enthusiastic about its potential. As Oksana told us, “WIEGO has so much expertise and can train on how to organize and how to negotiate for those in informal employment. At the same time, we will draw closer together for the sake of our joint constituency, which is informally employed workers.”

Seizing the Moment from COVID-19

The majority of the global workforce – 61 per cent – is informal and has been disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and by the accompanying economic downturn. We are seizing the moment as the global community considers how to rebuild a more equitable and fair world.

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WIEGO, alongside membership-based organizations of the working poor, monitored the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on workers in informal employment around the world. In mid-2021, interviews were conducted with the same domestic workers, home-based workers, street vendors and market traders, and waste pickers in 11 cities as in the mid-2020 surveys to assess if they had recovered. We talked to workers in Accra (Ghana), Ahmedabad (India), Bangkok (Thailand), Dakar (Senegal), Delhi (India), Durban (South Africa), Lima (Peru), Mexico City (Mexico), Pleven (Bulgaria), New York City (USA) and Tiruppur (India). Seventy per cent of the study respondents were women, broadly reflecting the gender composition of the four sectors. The 2021 findings suggest that the economic fallout of the COVID-19 crisis remains deep and persistent for workers at the base of the economy. The level of indebtedness that workers have been forced into means the COVID-19 crisis is far from over. Since the pandemic began, 52 per cent of respondents drew down on their savings, 46 per cent borrowed money, and 17 per cent sold or pawned assets to get by. The vast majority (82 per cent) of respondents who had drawn down on savings since the beginning of the pandemic were unable to replace any of the savings by mid2021. WIEGO has drawn lessons from the pandemic and, with our allies, is continuing advocacy work for a just economic recovery with renewed vigour.

Where WIEGO Worked in 2021-2022*

Argentina Bangladesh Brazil Bulgaria Cambodia Chile Colombia Costa Rica Democratic Republic of the Congo Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Ethiopia France Germany Ghana Guatemala Honduras India Indonesia Jordan Kenya Laos Lebanon Malawi Mexico Morocco Nepal Nicaragua Niger Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Senegal

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Sierra Leone South Africa Spain Tanzania Thailand Togo Tunisia Uganda Uruguay USA Vietnam Zambia Zimbabwe

WIEGO’s Key Programmes

The Statistics Programme collaborates with official statisticians to improve statistical methods that will make visible the size and significance of the informal economy and the situation of all informal workers, and to prepare the data in formats that are accessible to a wide set of users.

The Organization & Representation Programme helps organizations of workers in informal employment build their organizational and leadership capacity, connect to each other and align with allies as they fight to improve the working conditions of their members.

The Law Programme strives for the recognition, inclusion and protection of the rights and work of workers in informal employment in international instruments, national and local laws and regulations. It works to build the capacity of workers in informal employment and their organizations to use the law to fight for secure livelihoods and labour rights.

Workers in informal employment need access to social protections that will protect and mitigate risks to their incomes and help them cope after an event or shock. The Social Protection Programme is committed to helping workers in informal employment access these rights.

By working with leaders of workers in informal employment, policymakers and urban practitioners, the Urban Policies Programme strives to help the urban poor achieve better incomes, more secure places to live and work, and the capacity to negotiate sustainable gains in urban policies and practices.

How WIEGO Supports Domestic Workers

Meet Norma Palacios

Norma is one of the founders and leaders of SINACTRAHO, a domestic workers’ union in Mexico. She has been a domestic worker for 27 years and, while she recognizes that she is tired and “has fears, like any other human being,” she finds strength in this movement.

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SINACTRAHO works to raise awareness of domestic workers’ economic and labour situation and strives to empower its members to demand and exercise their rights as workers.

“Most of the time you work in a place where the employer’s house is your workplace, but you can be alone all day long and you have no contact with other people with whom you identify. We do see that these relationships can develop when, perhaps, they work in the same building, when they establish a friendship, but we see that when they come to the union they become stronger.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the historic effort to ensure domestic workers’ long-term well-being became even more pressing. As well as advocating for social security, the union offered legal counselling to domestic workers who faced exploitative employment relations or were fired without justification during the crisis.

“Doing all these things during the pandemic showed us that we can achieve everything. It also strengthened me a lot: when we have these encounters with authorities I know we carry with us the voice of us as domestic workers […] We have to hold on to all these women to move forward.”

How WIEGO Programmes Support Domestic Workers

Organization & Representation Programme

After developing a toolkit on Convention 189, WIEGO facilitated negotiation skills training for domestic worker organizations. Experiences from this were shared by IDWF affiliates in a November 2021 workshop with the ILO commemorating C189. Beginning in October 2021, IDWF affiliates from 10 African countries took part in a six-month-long WIEGO online training on democratic leadership in trade unions. Participants said the course helped them to realize the importance of understanding and implementing their unions’ constitutions and to revise them appropriately to address the situation of domestic workers.

Statistics Programme

The Statistics Programme’s unique contribution is to improve the identification of domestic workers – and home-based workers, street vendors, market traders and waste pickers – in official statistics and to prepare statistics on these groups in accessible formats for use by membership-based organizations (MBOs), global networks of workers in informal employment, and allied policy advocates. International statistics work makes possible global statistical briefs such as the ILO-WIEGO-IDWF brief on domestic workers. It also informs WIEGO’s preparation of briefs at the national, urban and city levels on informal employment. Briefs for Chile and Senegal include trend information on each group, including domestic workers, and facilitate work to improve the situation of these workers.

Law Programme

With the aim of legally empowering domestic workers so that they can realize their rights and respond to violations by employers, WIEGO held meetings this year with workers’ organizations in Tanzania and South Africa. Domestic workers’ struggles include limited legal awareness and access to legal services, uneven legal protection, non-compliance by employers, difficulty in organizing, and poor enforcement. WIEGO’s legal empowerment work aims to train domestic workers on legal issues, thereby increasing their access to justice. By empowering domestic workers themselves to know and use the law – equipping them with legal knowledge, and negotiation and mediation skills – the work aims to break the barriers to access to justice, including the hierarchical relationship between legal professionals and workers that can prevent the latter from seeking redress. Ultimately, the work with IDWF affiliates will embed, through a training-of-trainers model, a culture of legal empowerment in their organizations so that all members are able to know, use and shape the law to secure their rights.

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Social Protection Programme

With the IDWF, WIEGO produced a series of policy briefs on domestic workers and social protection in South Asia. These looked at the barriers domestic workers face in accessing social protection and public services, as well as the costs they carry in order to access these services. For example, domestic workers in India said they were paying the equivalent of three weeks of earnings to visit a health care centre. About 70 per cent of workers reported having to take out a loan to finance their last health visit. In Tamil Nadu, domestic workers said they lack knowledge about their entitlements, lack documentation for registration, and migrant workers are excluded from welfare provisions. The cost of applying for a social security benefit for the typical domestic worker in our survey was 1.5 times her weekly earnings. Domestic worker organizations in South Asia are using this research in their local-level organizing and advocacy.

Urban Policies Programme

WIEGO’s COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study monitored workers’ hardships, loss of jobs and inability to recover earnings by mid-2021. The study found that, among domestic workers, “live-out” domestic workers were more likely to lose their jobs and struggle to regain them, whereas “live-in” workers experienced deteriorating working conditions. Both types of domestic workers reported a weakening of their bargaining power with employers. In Mexico City, SINACTRAHO, the national union of domestic workers, used study results on food insecurity and loss of income to engage the Mexican Congress on the long-standing demands of domestic workers.

How WIEGO Supports Street Vendors and Market Traders

Meet Oksana Abboud

“2022 marks the 20th anniversary of StreetNet International since its establishment in Durban, South Africa,” notes Oksana, International Coordinator of StreetNet, the global alliance of street and market vendors.

“WIEGO played a key role in the creation of StreetNet. WIEGO’s leadership at the time recognized the crucial need for an international umbrella to unite and support street vendors around the world.”

With the rapid growth in technology globally, street vendor organizations should position themselves to take advantage of this with new approaches and strategies, Oksana says.

“We might see integration of street vendors into digital platforms, with vendors finding their niche in using the technology for sustainability, development and livelihood purposes.”

She believes that a shift could be coming, with street vendors gaining more recognition and respect for their human and workers’ rights and their role as economic players. StreetNet is growing – expanding its borders and attracting new members, and WIEGO gives the movement recognition and confidence at international and other levels, she says.

“It means a lot to be part of a global network for the vulnerable, for the unrecognized – and to be part of such a highly respected network with a high level of organization ... It empowers us and brings us into more unity. We feel part of a big family.”

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How WIEGO Programmes Support Street Vendors and Market Traders

Organization & Representation Programme

The implementation of ILO Recommendation 204 on the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy is an ongoing WIEGO priority. In the spirit of that transition, five towns across two provinces in South Africa have established a formal relationship between street vendor representatives and council officials. In October 2021, the two parties held a policy dialogue where public-space guidelines were launched, and they signed a joint declaration of commitment to practical interventions to improve the vendors’ working conditions. These and other achievements in which WIEGO played a key role have generated more media coverage and created the potential for significant shifts in workers’ material conditions.

Statistics Programme

The programme prepared briefs at the national, urban and city levels on main worker groups, including street vendors and market traders, for Chile and Senegal. The Chile brief was presented to representatives of unions and federations of street vendors, waste pickers, domestic workers and homebased workers, the Workers United Centre of Chile and a representative of the metropolitan region’s Ministry of Labour and Social Provision. Worker organizations noted how important it is to have statistics for their advocacy and to bring visibility.

Law Programme

WIEGO’s Administrative Justice project aims to provide people working in public space with the knowledge and skills to defend their rights against violations by public authorities, and the ability to demand access to and participate meaningfully in law and policymaking processes. In Senegal and Ghana, the Law Programme mapped institutions and stakeholders involved in the regulation and management of public space and interviewed public authorities and vendors to assess regulations that govern access to space and its implementation on the ground. The study’s theme was law and the distribution of power and entitlements in the urban space from the vantage point of street and market vendors. Also, WIEGO’s analysis of COVID-19 in seven Asian countries shows that laws and policies do not recognize informal traders as legitimate economic actors or the role that informal food vendors play in promoting food security. WIEGO’s analysis of the pandemic laws that regulated informal work in 16 countries in Latin America generated similar conclusions.

Social Protection Programme

In response to growing needs highlighted by the COVID-19 crisis, the Social Protection Programme expanded its regional advocacy for income protection this year. The adoption of the African Union’s Protocol on Social Protection in February 2022 was cause for celebration as WIEGO has worked with partners, including StreetNet International, to ensure that this legally binding instrument directly includes workers in informal employment in policy making, among other demands. The fact that the African Union now has a single binding instrument that addresses a broad range of social protection issues sets a clearer direction for regional advocacy. Also in Africa, a notable gain for street vendors and other workers in informal employment operating in public space was made when the South African Local Government Association (SALGA) drew on WIEGO’s child-care work with Asiye eTafuleni to include child-care provision in their Public Space Trading Guidelines, 2021-2026.

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Urban Policies Programme

The Urban Policies Programme has worked this year on securing inclusive planning practices and policy in a range of contexts and countries. In New York City, UPP partnered with the Street Vendor Project on the COVID-19 impact study and together they jointly identified lessons in advocacy that have global relevance. Also, WIEGO’s work in local-level experimentation with urban planning and design and legal frameworks was profiled in the United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) Gold VI Report, which documents public-space trading innovations in Durban, South Africa, and Delhi, India, as well as institutionalized social dialogue in Lima, Peru.

How WIEGO Supports Waste Pickers

Meet Coura Ndiaye

Coura is an honorary leader among waste pickers in the Mbeubeuss dumpsite, about 30 kilometres away from Dakar, capital of Senegal. People generally call her “Mother Coura” out of respect for her age and the number of years she has worked as a waste picker.

In 2000, Coura joined the Association of Waste Pickers of Mbeubeuss, known as Bokk Diom, and she later led the association. She is a firm believer in the importance of being organized – particularly for women – in order to defend waste pickers’ livelihoods and improve their working conditions.

This is particularly crucial as the government has so far refused to include waste pickers in its current solid waste management project, or at least guarantee their means of subsistence, Coura says. The restructuring of the dumpsite led by the waste management agency is affecting women waste pickers’ working conditions and safety.

“For example, the road they built to get to the platform, this road is the cause of the flooding. Because this road is very high, if it rains, it flows directly onto us.”

She says Bokk Diom needs to become stronger and improve communication between leaders and members to tackle the challenges and needs. The waste pickers also need help from the government’s waste management agency to improve their working conditions at the dumpsite, which would increase their income, Coura says.

“The state should help us and not the other way around. We are the first in this dumpsite, and we are the most legitimate to benefit from the dumpsite.”

How WIEGO Programmes Support Waste Pickers

Organization & Representation Programme

The Organization & Representation Programme supported progress towards the establishment of a global organization of waste pickers this year, concluding with ongoing discussions of a draft Constitution and discussions of issues that have helped build a sense of common purpose. Early in 2022, WIEGO coordinated a delegation of waste picker MBOs to participate in the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi, Kenya, in support of a global plastics treaty. A significant victory was achieved when the UNEA-5.2 resolution recognized waste pickers as recyclers of plastics in informal and cooperative settings. Waste picker representatives will take their proposals to the next Intergovernmental Negotiations Committee meeting on plastic pollution. The Organization & Representation Programme also has focused on empowering MBOs to engage governments and the private sector on Extended Producer Responsibility policies and regulations. In South Africa, this led to an agreement in principle about payment to waste pickers for their environmental services.

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Statistics Programme

The identification of waste pickers through national surveys presents special problems. However, national survey data are a useful starting point. Waste Pickers in Brazil: A Statistical Profile (WIEGO Statistical Brief No. 29), published in English and Portuguese in November 2021, provides statistics on the extent of waste picker employment in the country, urban areas and major cities, as well as waste pickers’ characteristics and working conditions. The Programme is working with the WIEGO team and members of the waste picker community to improve methods for collecting data on these workers.

Law Programme

In the Waste Pickers and Human Rights Project, WIEGO and partners petitioned the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights for the right to work to include workers in informal employment and for a thematic hearing on the rights violations of waste pickers in seven Latin American countries. While the hearing was not granted, the team was invited to meet with the commissioners and will petition again for a hearing. The Law Programme did capacity building with waste pickers to enable the workers to present arguments in front of the commission, and collaboration is continuing. Also, the Administrative Justice stream of work is strengthening its focus on R204, which provides a comprehensive model of formalization that recognizes the socio-economic contributions of workers in informal employment and promotes the adoption of enabling regulatory frameworks and strategies that prioritize their needs. The next phase adopts a strong cross-sectoral approach, involving organizations of waste pickers, who share the struggle for access and meaningful use of public space.

Social Protection Programme

With WIEGO support, the Movement of Excluded Workers (MTE) – a member of Unión de Trabajadores y Trabajadoras de la Economía Popular (UTEP) – in Argentina developed an innovative programme through their child-care and after-school centres to support children who experienced abuse during the COVID-19 lockdown periods. UTEP-MTE were able to adapt their child-care services rapidly to respond to the needs of waste pickers, street vendors, garment workers and community workers represented in the union.

Urban Policies Programme

Through the CataSaúde Viraliza project in Brazil, WIEGO enhanced worker capacity to reduce risks and secure gains. By the end of July 2021, more than 400 waste pickers had completed the online capacitybuilding project that sought to provide waste pickers with a deeper understanding of decent work conditions and health and safety protocols. Participants represented all five regions of Brazil. The CataSaúde Viraliza project focused on strengthening alliances with both organized and non-organized waste pickers, by drawing on the expertise of multiple partners and research activists. For several of these partners, this was the first time they had worked together to help bridge understandings among both groups of waste pickers. In Belo Horizonte, WIEGO celebrated 10 years of the Gender and Waste Project with an e-book launch where women waste picker leaders reflected on gains made in working to build gender awareness in the National Waste Pickers Movement (MNCR) and local cooperatives.

How WIEGO’s Focal Cities Teams Support Workers in Informal Employment

WIEGO’s Focal Cities approach supports organizations of workers in informal employment to engage with government officials to secure more inclusive laws and regulations, improved urban services and a voice in urban planning and policymaking processes. WIEGO’s five Focal Cities are Accra, Ghana; Dakar, Senegal; Delhi, India; Lima, Peru; and Mexico City, Mexico.

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Accra, Ghana

The team works with market traders , street vendors , waste pickers and market porters .

In Accra, the Focal Cities team’s work focused on securing progressive national child-care guidelines. These were developed through a participatory process that brought together parents of children in market-based day-care centres, informal trade organization representatives, child-care workers, officials from the Department of Social Welfare and the Department of Children, an urban planning specialist, an early childhood care and development expert and a legal consultant. The guidelines, which integrate the concerns of workers in informal employment, fill a gap in Ghana’s regulatory framework for childcare centres in markets. Market trade represents 40 per cent of women’s employment in Greater Accra and urban Ghana.

Dakar, Senegal

The team works with market traders , street vendors , prepared meals vendors and waste pickers .

WIEGO’s work in Dakar supporting waste pickers from the Mbeubeuss dumpsite has a growing focus on promoting a just transition that would secure their livelihoods as the government implements a World Bank-funded project to restructure and eventually close the dumpsite – the Promotion of Integrated Waste Management and the Economy of Solid Waste (PROMOGED). Working with the National Confederation of Workers of Senegal (CNTS), WIEGO’s launch of the findings of the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study resulted in a public pledge of inclusion in PROMOGED from the President of Senegal and a promise by the head of PROMOGED to improve working conditions. To boost the capacities of Bokk Diom – the organization of waste pickers in Mbeubeuss – to defend their rights and position themselves within waste management, WIEGO and Bokk Diom developed research on alternative livelihoods and jointly engaged in organizational strengthening efforts. In December 2021, supported by WIEGO and the ILO, waste pickers from Bokk Diom successfully formed a cooperative, and they are also in the process of creating a union.

Delhi, India

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors and waste pickers and focuses on inclusion of issues affecting workers in informal employment in cross-sectoral urban discourses.

WIEGO and its partners in Delhi saw the culmination of several years of joint advocacy when the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) released its draft Delhi Master Plan 2041 in 2021. For the first time, the informal economy is recognized as the city’s largest employer, and the plan contains enabling language for the integration of workers in informal employment. To achieve this change, the Focal Cities Delhi team supported a broad-based campaign – the Main Bhi Dilli (“I, Too, am Delhi”) coalition of diverse worker groups and civil society organizations – to influence the Delhi Master Plan as a “people’s plan” with supportive measures for housing, livelihood and social infrastructure. After the draft was released, the coalition successfully advocated for an extension of the public comment period to allow for broader citizen participation. It also supported grassroots leaders in organizing 250 meetings with worker groups across Delhi, and helped facilitate the submission of 25,000 comments from workers in informal employment and community groups across Delhi to the DDA.

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For the year ended 31 March 2022

Lima, Peru

The team works with domestic workers , home-based workers , street vendors , waste pickers , canillitas /newspaper vendors and market porters .

Our central focus this year was to implement COVID-19 impact research and support MBOs in making their voices heard regarding recovery. Following the launch of the COVID-19 Crisis and the Informal Economy Study in Lima, newly elected President Pedro Castillo mentioned the pandemic’s effects on workers in informal employment and announced a programme that would satisfy a key demand. In his July 28, 2021 inaugural speech, Castillo announced measures of financial support to micro and small enterprises. The measures included state-guaranteed credit with longer grace periods, refinancing of debt and special credit support to women entrepreneurs. Access to credit of small amounts and affordable interest rates have been key workers’ demands coming out of the study.

Mexico City, Mexico

The team works with domestic workers , street vendors , waste pickers and non-salaried workers, including mariachi musicians, coffee vendors, shoe shiners and organ players.

In Mexico City, the team continued engaging Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH) on informal worker issues and supporting workers in filing complaints with the commission regarding evictions, confiscations and destruction of property. The commission’s bulletin highlighted the importance of non-salaried work and called on all decision makers to avoid the use of stigmatizing and offensive language in relation to those who carry out this work. The commission called attention to the fact that in Mexico, “more than 90 per cent of paid domestic work operates informally, despite the existence of a mechanism for labour and social security regulation.”

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