Work and Employment


What this section covers

This section explains how work is organised through employment relationships and how those relationships structure rights, obligations, and financial flows. It focuses on employment as a system design, not on individual careers, job‑seeking, or workplace advice.

Work as an organised activity

Work refers to economic activity performed to produce goods or services. In modern economies, a large share of work is organised through formal employment relationships, where work is exchanged for pay under defined legal and institutional rules. Employment provides the framework through which:

Understanding employment structures is therefore essential for understanding how income, labour costs, and social systems interact.

The employment relationship

An employment relationship establishes a formal link between:

This relationship determines:

Employment relationships are shaped by law and institutions rather than by individual negotiation alone.

Employment and system boundaries

Not all work takes place under the same type of employment relationship. Differences in classification influence:

This section explains structural distinctions, not contractual advice or legal compliance.

Relationship to other sections

The Work & Employment section complements other pillars:

Each pillar addresses a different layer of the same overall system.


Work and Employment Deep dives

The following pages explore specific structural aspects of employment classification and related concepts:


Scope limitations

This section does not cover:

Content is limited to institutional and structural explanations.