1. Child Labor in Bolivia
In 1998, the International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated that 13 percent
of children between the ages of 10 and 14 years in Bolivia were working.208
Bolivia’s Ministry of Planning and Sustainable Development, however, reports
that approximately 23 percent (nearly 370,000) of children between the ages
of 7 and 14 work, and approximately 221,000 of those children do not attend
school at all.209 Children in Bolivia generally
enter the labor market between the ages of 10 and 12, but working children as
young as 6 are reported to work.210 Children and
adolescents frequently work the same number of hours as adults.211
The greatest percentage of child labor occurs in rural areas, particularly
in the construction, livestock and agricultural sectors.212
In the rural areas, work for children is traditionally considered a formative
experience from which children derive skills and basic tools for their future.213
The number of working boys in rural areas is twice as great as the number of
working girls.214
The ratio of working boys to working girls in urban areas is almost 1 to 1.215
The number of working boys is almost twice that of working girls in the construction
and transport sectors, and 67 percent of working children in the manufacturing
sector are boys. Girls account for almost all the working children in the domestic
service sector, and for about 75 percent of all working children in the hotel
and restaurant sectors. The ratio of working boys to girls in the commercial
sector is nearly even.216
Children participate in all aspects of small-scale, traditional mining in Bolivia,
including the extraction of underground ore, which often involves handling explosives
for drilling and blasting operations; the transporting of ore from the interior
of the mines, during which children often carry heavy loads directly on their
backs; the crude processing of the mineral including crushing it with hammers
and heavy machinery; and the amalgamation of the ore, which exposes children
to mercury vapor.217
Another recognized form of child labor is the criadito practice. Criados
are maids or houseboys, often of indigenous origin, who are sent by their parents
to work in middle-class and upper-class households, usually in urban centers.
Children are required to perform domestic labor in exchange for education, clothing,
room, and board. Since there are no controls over the treatment of children
in this arrangement, many become virtual slaves for the years of their indenture.
Employers frequently do not honor their part of the agreement, and criado children
often do not receive schooling.218
A major factor contributing to child labor in Bolivia in the 1990s is the economic,
political and social crisis which has elevated levels of poverty throughout
the country.219 Many of the resulting “new poor”
have lost their sources of income from the formal and informal sectors of the
economy.220
Commercial sexual exploitation of children is reported in Bolivia, particularly
in the nightclub scene of poor urban areas.221
Individuals who prostitute children often look for new recruits at bus and train
stations where young people first arrive in cities.222
Press reports also indicate that some policemen responsible for issuing licenses
to adult prostitutes in the city of Cochabamba have accepted under-the-table
payments in return for altering the documentation of minors in order to enable
them to work as prostitutes.223
Many rural Bolivian children are lured to more prosperous countries like Peru,
Chile, Argentina, and Spain with promises of good salaries and an opportunity
to support their families back home.224 Bolivian
traffickers living abroad return to Bolivia to entice minors with false promises.
They disguise the children as tourists and traffic them to other countries.
The Bolivian Commission on Social Policy reports that more than 24,000 children
have been trafficked since June 2000.225
2. Children’s Participation in School
In 1997, net primary school attendance in Bolivia was 81.5 percent,226
and net primary school enrollment was 97.4 percent.227
However, according to government reports, more than 56 percent of Bolivian children
and adolescents do not attend or have abandoned school.228
In urban centers, 57 percent of all children between the ages of 7 and 12 abandon
school before the sixth grade. The dropout rate increases to 89 percent in rural
regions.229 In the year 2000, nearly 55,000 families
refrained from sending one or more of their children to school. This suggests
that, as a result, approximately 221,000 children between the ages of 6 and
15 abandoned school that year.230 A study published
by the Ministry of Education indicates that four out of five illiterate citizens
are female, and that girls frequently leave school at a young age to work and
supplement the family income.231
A study carried out by the Ministry of Planning’s Educational Reform Team showed
that in rural areas only 0.7 percent of girls and 1.4 percent of boys finish
high school. The numbers are significantly higher in urban areas, with 26 percent
of girls and 31 percent of boys graduating from high school. 232
In rural areas, access to school and additional costs associated with schooling
frequently represent significant obstacles for poorer families. In addition,
corporal punishment and verbal abuse make schooling less attractive to many
children.233 These factors contribute to an increasing
school desertion rate and a widening gap between a child’s chronological age
and his or her academic level.234
Lack of proper birth certification is a significant obstacle to accessing education
for many children in Bolivia. Children must be properly registered with the
state in order to have access to education and public health services. The Bolivian
Code for Boys, Girls and Adolescents, which was formalized in June 2000, establishes
that all youths under the age of 18 must be officially registered with the state.
While the code states that birth certification should be provided without charge,235
in practice Bolivian legislation only provides free birth certificates for infants
up to 3 months of age. As a result, families frequently have to bear the cost
of birth certification. Children from families who cannot afford this cost are
left without proper documentation and are subject to being denied access to
formal education and government-provided health and social security benefits.236
According to one international organization, as of November 2000 only 89,480
children out of an estimated 400,000 children under the age of 7 had been properly
registered with the state.237
3. Child Labor Law and Enforcement
In accordance with the Bolivian Code for Boys, Girls and Adolescents, 14 is
the legal minimum age for employment.238 The code
also states that working children and adolescents between the ages of 14 and
18 are required to obtain authorization from their parents or wards. If neither
exists, then they need to request authorization from a labor inspector of the
Labor Ministry.239
In March 2001, the Government of Bolivia adopted the stipulations of the Child
and Adolescent Code that allow judges and other authorities of the Bolivian
Ministry of Justice to impose penalties for violations of the rights of minors
within the country.240
The General Labor Law allows for apprenticeships for children younger than
14, which may not exceed a two-year period.241
Apprenticeships require a signed contract in which salary and other terms are
clarified.242 All apprenticeship contracts must
be stamped by a labor inspector.243 According
to the General Labor Law, employers are required to oversee that apprentices
attend school during normal school hours.244
The General Labor Law also prohibits minors from dangerous, unhealthy and physically
taxing work or work that negatively affects their moral and proper upbringing.
It also outlaws minors from working in underground mines. The Labor law further
states that women and children under 18 years of age are only permitted to work
during the day except those involved in fields where exceptions apply, such
as nursing or domestic service.245
Prostitution is legal in Bolivia for individuals over 18.246
Although child prostitution is outlawed, enforcement is poor and police raids
are ineffectual and easily avoided.247 Bolivian
law prohibits forced labor.248 All forms of pornography
are illegal under Bolivian law.249
The Government of Bolivia ratified International Labor Organization (ILO) Convention
No. 138 on Minimum Age for Employment on June 11, 1997.250
4. Addressing Child Labor and Promoting Schooling
a. Child Labor Initiatives
Due to frequent changes in Bolivia’s Cabinet of Ministers, the Inter-Institutional
Commission on the Eradication of Child Labor was slow to develop, but in July
2000 the commission began to meet on a regular basis.251
In December 2000, the commission completed a National Plan on the Progressive
Eradication of Child Labor 2000-2010 that was approved by Bolivia’s Congress.
The plan proposes combined efforts from the public, private, nongovernmental
organization (NGO), and local community sectors to address all forms of child
labor by offering children financial, health, and recreational opportunities,
and by providing families with economic alternatives.252
In 1996, Bolivia became a member of the International Labor Organization’s
International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC). The U.S.
Department of Labor has provided funding to support an IPEC project to progressively
eliminate child labor in small-scale traditional mining in the Andean region.
The local NGOs Centro de Desarrollo Regional (CDR), Medioambiente Minera y Industria
(MEDMIN) and Centro de Promoción Minera (CEPROMIN) are implementing this project,
which aims to remove 2,000 children and adolescents from hazardous mining work
and prevent 1,000 others from entering the sector through education, health,
and vocational services.253 IPEC also supports
a project to progressively eradicate urban child labor in the capital city of
La Paz.254
Defense for Children International (DNI), supported by the Bolivian arm of
the Global March to Eliminate Child Labor, develops and publishes pamphlets
on the current state of working children in Bolivia.255
DNI’s goal is to raise the awareness of authorities and the business community
about the adoption of measures in favor of children’s rights.256
Local NGOs, such as Environmental Development Action in the Third World (ENDA),
are developing projects and strategies that aim to remove working children from
hazardous environments and place them in schools. ENDA recently developed a
project that provides micro credits and skills training to the families of working
children to help them overcome dependence on income earned through the labor
of their children and, at the same time, to increase the productivity and income
of these families.257 Similarly, the local NGO
Qharuru has developed a holistic service center for shoe shiners and working
street children.258 Now in its 15th year, the
center supports and collaborates with government-run night schools created for
working minors, and offers various types of support such as health services
for working children.259
Since 1997, the Private Workers Confederation of Bolivia (CEPB) has been working
in conjunction with the ILO to provide occupational training to working adolescents,
with the goal of placing these adolescents in the local labor sectors.260
b. Educational Alternatives
The Constitution of Bolivia proclaims the provision of education as a principal
responsibility of the state and establishes free, compulsory primary education
for 8 years. Basic primary education is free and compulsory for a minimum of
8 years for children aged 6 to 14.261 The Child
and Adolescent Code outlines the government’s responsibility to honor the educational
rights of Bolivian children.262 The government
is responsible for providing basic education to adolescents and adults who were
not able to attend school with their cohort age groups during the regular primary
school years.263 The code also outlines the government’s
responsibility to provide adolescents with easy access to school and with curricula
designed and adapted for working adolescents.264
The Child and Adolescent Code calls upon the government to take steps to reduce
school desertion rates, to build schools where they do not exist, to adapt the
school calendar and attendance schedule to local realities, and to raise awareness
within communities and among parents about the importance of registering children
for school and maintaining their regular attendance. The code further stipulates
that the Government of Bolivia must provide primary school students with school
materials, transportation, meals, and medical services.265
The General Labor Law requires any employer who has hired more than 30 school-aged
children (typically between the ages of 6 and 14) to provide them with a school
if there is not a public school available. In the case of employers who have
hired fewer than 30 school-aged children, they are expected to work together
to provide a community school for all working children in the area to attend.266
According to the Law of Popular Participation (1994), municipal governments
are responsible for providing, maintaining, enlarging, and relocating as needed,
school infrastructure, furniture, equipment, and instructional materials. The
municipal governments receive funding for such activities, but most have not
yet met this responsibility.267
During the 1990s, Bolivia’s Educational Reform Program developed the System
for Measuring the Quality of Education (SIMECAL). SIMECAL is used to evaluate
students’ academic performance and identify factors that influence it. Indicators
drawn from SIMECAL measurements are used to coordinate improvements in education
quality within the national educational system.268
In 2000, the Vice-Ministry of Gender Affairs designed a second phase (2001-2004)
of its Scholarization of Child Workers program (PENNT), which targets children
between the ages of 7 and 12.269 PENNT provides
in-kind contributions to children, in the form of materials, food, and financial
aid.270 The main objectives of the program are
to strengthen Bolivia’s educational institutions and pedagogical training centers,
promote family and community participation, improve the target group’s access
to quality health services, and raise awareness at the local and national level
about the dangers of child labor and the importance of education.271
This program functions in four of the country’s main urban centers, with the
long-term objective of promoting equality and enhancing human capital, thereby
contributing to Bolivia’s economic and social progress.272
The Government of Bolivia’s Vice-Ministry of Alternative Education has created
the Alternative Youth Education (EJA) program, which targets girls, street children,
children and adolescent workers, and at-risk youth. The program is designed
to keep children and adolescents in school by offering them night classes with
specially designed curricula that are flexible and adapted to the population’s
specific needs.273 These curricula include coursework
in basic market skills and democratic principles, the latter of which teaches
children about their rights as citizens.274
Spending by the Government of Bolivia on education has ranged from between
4.9 and 5.9 percent of gross national product (GNP) from 1994 to 1996.275
Public spending dedicated to primary education as a percentage of GNP had ranged
from 1.62 percent to 2.37 from 1990 to 1999.276
5. Selected Data on Government Expenditures
The following bar chart presents selected government expenditures expressed
as a percentage of GNP. The chart considers government expenditures on education,
the military, health care, and debt service. Where figures are available, the
portion of government spending on education that is specifically dedicated to
primary education is also shown.277
While it is difficult to draw conclusions or discern clear correlations between
areas of government expenditure as a percentage of GNP and the incidence of
child labor in a country, this chart and the related tables presented in Appendix
B (Tables 14 through 19) offer the reader a basis for considering the relative
emphasis placed on each spending area by the governments in each of the 33 countries
profiled in the report.
208 World Development Indicators 2000 .
209 The Ministry of Planning and Sustainable Development
has reported that of the approximately 1.6 million children and adolescents
between the ages of 7 and 14 in the country nearly 370,000 work. Ministerio
de Desarrollo Sostenible y Planificación, Vice-Ministerio de Asuntos de Género,
Generacionales y Familia, Dirección General de Asuntos Generacionales y Familia,
Programa de Asistencia Familiar para la Permanencia Escolar de Niñas y Niños
Trabajadores, February 2001, 6 [hereinafter Programa de Asistencia Familiar
para la Permanencia Escolar ]. The age ranges that define the categories
of “children” and “adolescents” in Bolivia are unclear in the Child and Adolescent
Code and in the Labor Code, but official statistics classify anyone who is economically
active between the ages of 7 and 10 as a child and anyone who is economically
active between the ages of 10 and 19 as an adolescent. Plan Nacional para la
Erradicación Progresiva del Trabajo Infantil 2000-2010, Elaborado por la Comisión
Interinstitucional de Erradicación Progresiva del Trabajo Infantil, La Paz,
2000, 18.
210 Programa de Asistencia Familiar para la
Permanencia Escolar at 6.
211 International Confederation of Trade Unions
(ICFTU), Report on Core Labour Standards for the WTO: Report for the WTO
General Council Review of the Trade Policies of Bolivia (Geneva, July 19
and 21, 1999) (www2.iicftu.org/displaydocument.asp?Index= 990916233&Language’EN&Printout=Yes)
[hereinafter Report on Core Labour Standards for the WTO ].
212 “Trabajo infantil: 370 mil niños trabajan
en Bolivia, informo hoy la viceministra de Género, Jarmila Moravek,” El Diario,
July 5, 2000 (www.caj.../bdescriptor.in]?bdatos=2000&egistros=25&format=resumen&boolean=0499).
213 Programa de Asistencia Familiar para la
Permanencia Escolar at 7.
214 Trabajo infantil en los países Andinos:
Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru y Venezuela , Primera Edición (ILO: Lima,
Peru, 1998), 17 [hereinafter Trabajo infantil en los países Andinos ].
215 Ibid.
216 Vice-Ministerio de Asuntos de Género, Generaciones
y Familia, Dirección General de Asuntos Generacionales y Familia, Solicitud
de Cooperación: Proyecto de Continuidad del Programa de Escolarización de Niñas
y Niños Trabajadores de 7 a 12 Años de Edad , 10 [hereinafter Solicitud
de Cooperación ].
217 ILO-IPEC, Program to Prevent and Progressively
Eliminate Child Labor in Small-Scale Traditional Gold Mining in South America,
ILO-IPEC project document, March 9, 2000, 3 [document on file].
218 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
for 1999 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of State, 2000) (www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1999_hrp_report/bolivia.html),
Section 5 [hereinafter Country Reports 1999—Bolivia ].
219 Programa de Asistencia Familiar para la
Permanencia Escolar at 2.
220 Ibid.
221 U.S. Embassy—La Paz, unclassified telegram
no. 003284, July 28, 2000.
222 U.S. Embassy—La Paz, unclassified telegram
no. 005134, Oct. 22, 1999.
223 Presencia , “Algunos policías prostituyen
a menores,” November 14, 2000.
224 Los Tiempos (La Paz), Sept. 12, 2001,
as quoted in the UN Wire , Bolivia: Officials Launch Investigation
on Child Trafficking, September 12, 2001 (www.unfoundation.org/unwire/2001/09/12/current.asp#18042).
225 Ibid.
226 USAID, GED 2000: Global Education Database
[CD-ROM], Washington, D.C., 2000.
227 World Development Indicators 2000 .
228 Plan Nacional para la Erradicación Progresiva
del Trabajo Infantil 2000-2010, Elaborado por la Comision Interinstitucional
de Erradicación Progresiva del Trabajo Infantil (La Paz, 2000), 11.
229 Solicitud de Cooperación at 12.
230 Programa de Asistencia Familiar para la
Permanencia Escolar at 3.
231 U.S. Department of State, Human Rights Reports
for 1999: Bolivia (Washington, D.C., 2000), Section 5 (www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1999_hrp_report/).
232 Study carried out by Bolivia’s Ministry of
Planning’s Educational Reform Team, as cited in Core Labour Standards for
the WTO .
233 Country Reports 1999—Bolivia at Section
5.
234 Plan nacional para la erradicación progresiva
del trabajo infantile, 2000-2010, Elaborado por la Comisión Interinstitucional
de Erradicación Progresiva del Trabajo Infantil, La Paz, 2000, 11.
235 Presencia , “CNE vulnera Código del
Niño,” social section, November 14, 2000.
236 Ibid.
237 In reference to the number of children without
proper birth certification, the article cites information provided by Roxana
Jiménez, executive director, Defensa de Niños Internacional (DNI), Presencia
, November 14, 2000, ACNE vulnera Código del Niño.
238 Codigo del Niño, Niña y Adolescente: Ley número
2026 del 27 de octubre de 1999, U.P.S. editorial, La Paz, Bolivia, 2000, 41.
239 Ley General del Trabajo-Eleva a Rango de Ley,
Chapter 1, General Dispositions, Title II, Article 8 (www.bizinfonet.com/bolivia-pensions/laws/leytraba.htm).
240 Los Tiempos , Vida y Futuro, “Correo
del Sur: Protegan legalmente a los niños,” March 21, 2001 (www.lostiempos.com/pvyf4.shtml).
241 Ley General del Trabajo, Decreto Reglamentario,
Codigo Procesal del Trabajo, Decreto Ley de 24 de mayo de 1939, elevado a rango
de Ley el 8 de diciembre de 1942, U.P.S. editorial, La Paz, Bolivia, 2000, 20.
242 Ibid.
243 Ibid. at 69.
244 Ibid. at 20.
245 Ley General del Trabajo: Eleva a Rango de
Ley, Capitolo VI, Articulos, 58-61 (www.bizinfonet.com/bolivia-pensions/laws/leytraba.htm).
246 U.S. Embassy-La Paz, unclassified telegram
no. 003434, August 4, 2000 [hereinafter unclassified telegram, 003434].
247 Ibid.
248 Ley General de Trabajo, Decreto Reglamentario,
Codigo Procesal del Trabajo, Decreto ley de 24 de mayo de 1939, elevado a rango
de Ley el 8 de diciembre de 1942, Capitulo IV, Del Contrato de “Enganche,” U.P.S.
editorial, La Paz, Bolivia, 69.
249 Unclassified telegram, 003434.
250 For a list of which countries profiled in
Chapter 3 have ratified ILO Conventions No. 138 and No. 182, see Appendix
C.
251 U.S. Embassy-La Paz, unclassified telegram
no. 003284, July 28, 2000.
252 U.S. Embassy-La Paz, unclassified telegram
no. 00517, December 4, 2000.
253 U.S. Department of Labor, International Labor
Organization, International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC),
Program to Prevent and Progressively Eliminate Child Labor in Small-Scale
Traditional Gold Mining in South America , ILO-IPEC project document, 1999,
11 [document on file].
254 ILO-IPEC and Environmental Development Action
in the Third World (ENDA), Bolivia, Intermediate Evaluation, Erradicación
Gradual del Trabajo Infantil en Niños y Niñas Trabajadores de la Calle de la
Ciudad de El Alto, February 2000 [document on file].
255 Trabajo infantil en los países Andinos
.
256 El Tiempo, “Crece explotación laboral
a menores en Bolivia” [online], Honduras, March 20, 1998 (www.casa- alianza.org/ES/human-rights/labor-exploit/press/98032o.shtml).
257 Interview with Oscar Saavedra, program coordinator,
ENDA, by U.S. Department of Labor official, El Alto, November 9, 2000.
258 Quaruru, Proyecto de erradicación progresiva
del trabajo infantil en La Paz, Bolivia (La Paz, Bolivia: Dierpre Publicaciones),
December 1999.
259 Programa de fortalecimiento eucativo de
niños trabajadores lustrabotas , Quaruru.
260 Trabajo infantil en los países Andinos
at 26.
261 UNESCO, La EPT Evaluación 2000 , Informes
de País, Bolivia, Parte II: Sección Analitica, 3.1, En la estructura curricular
(www2.unesco.org/wef/countryreports/bolivia/rapport_1.html) [hereinafter
La EPT Evaluación 2000 ].
262 Codigo del Niño, Niña y Adolescente: Ley número
2026 del 27 de octubre de 1999, U.P.S. editorial, La Paz, Bolivia, 2000, 37.
263 Ibid.
264 Ibid.
265 Ibid. at 38.
266 Ley General del Trabajo, Decreto Reglamentario,
Codigo Procesal del Trabajo, Decreto Ley de 24 de mayo de 1939, elevado a rango
de Ley el 8 de diciembre de 1942. U.P.S. editorial, La Paz, Bolivia, 2000.
267 La EPT Evaluación 2000 (www2.unesco.org/wef/countryreports/bolivia/rapport_1.html).
268 SIMECAL measurements include access to primary
education; dropout and grade repetition rates; efficiency and performance; public
expenditure on education; human teaching resources; academic levels of primary
school teachers; and student-teacher interaction. See La EPT Evaluación 2000
.
269 Solicitud de Cooperación .
270 Naomi Westland, “Working Children Denied Education,”
The Bolivian Times [document on file] [hereinafter “Working Children
Denied Education”].
271 Solicitud de Cooperación .
272 “Working Children Denied Education.”
273 Ministerio de Educatión, Cultura y Deportes,
Vice-Ministerio de Educación Alternativa, Boletin Informativo del Proyecto
Curricular de la Escuela Nocturna-EJA , Año 2-No, 2-Enero 1999.
274 Ministerio de Educatión, Cultura y Deportes,
Vice-Ministerio de Educación Alternativa, Nuevos Programas de la Escuela
Nocturna: Fase Validación , La Paz, febrero de 1999.
275 World Development Indicators 2000 .
276 United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Institute for Statistics [CD- ROM], Education
for All: Year 2000 Assessment—A Decade of Education, Country Report, Bolivia
(Paris, 2000).
277 See Chapter 1, Section C, 5 for a fuller
discussion of the information presented in the box. See also Appendix
B for further discussion, and Tables 14 through 19 for figures on government
expenditure over a range of years.