INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION  PRESS RELEASE

Simultaneously released in Geneva and Washington D.C.
Tuesday 26 November 1996 (ILO/96/40)

GLOBAL UNEMPLOYMENT CRISIS CONTINUES; WAGE INEQUALITIES
RISING, SAYS ILO RENEWED INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENT TO
FULL EMPLOYMENT IS NEEDED

GENEVA (ILO News) - Nearly one billion people around
the world, approximately 30% of the entire global work
force, are unemployed or under-employed in
industrialized and developing countries alike, says a
new report by the International Labour Office (ILO).
..
In its report, World Employment 1996/97, the ILO calls
the global employment situation "grim." The ILO warns
that the growing numbers of "working poor" risk
aggravating the social and economic ills caused by high
jobless rates.

In the world's wealthiest nations, members of the
Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development,
at least 34 million people are unemployed. In the
European Union, unemployment increased last year to an
average of 11.3 per cent of the workforce, with France,
Germany, Italy and Sweden registering significant
increases. In the United States, on the other hand, job
creation has intensified and unemployment has dipped
below 5 per cent. Unemployment rates have also declined
in the United Kingdom. In both countries, however,
income disparities have tended to widen. In the
transition economies of Eastern and Central Europe,
unemployment rates declined slightly but remained at
double digit levels. In Russia and some other countries
of the former Soviet Union, unemployment continued to
increase.

Among Latin American countries, Colombia posted a rise
in unemployment from 8 to over 10 per cent.
Unemployment increased in urban areas in Argentina,
Bolivia, Ecuador, Jamaica, Mexico, Uruguay and
Venezuela. In sub-Saharan Africa and many parts of
Asia, data on direct unemployment hardly exists, but
problems of massive underemployment and poverty persist
in these low-income regions.

The ILO believes that nothing short of a renewed
international commitment to full employment is required
to reverse the poverty, unemployment and
underemployment now prevailing in so many parts of the
globe.

"It is not just heartless but pernicious to assume that
nothing can be done to remedy unemployment, that so-
called "jobless growth" (when a country's gross
domestic product, or GDP, grows with no substantial job
growth) is the best that can be hoped for in an
increasingly competitive economy or that current rates
of unemployment somehow constitute a natural and
inevitable outcome of market forces," says ILO Director-
General Michel Hansenne. "Current levels of
unemployment make no economic sense and are neither
politically nor socially sustainable."

The ILO Report identifies the underlying causes of
deteriorating labour market conditions as being:

Lower growth rates in industrialized countries since
1973 and the failure of most developing economies to
recover fully from the economic crisis of the early
1980s;

Slow adjustment of wages to declining labour
productivity and the emergence of wage inflation, which
lasted until the mid-1980s;

The progressive eviction from the world of work of the
long-term unemployed and the increasing casualization
of millions of workers in informal sector activities.

The report concludes that while there is no single
ideal prescription for developing, industrialized and
transition economies, the "priority requirement for
reversing the prolonged deterioration in employment
conditions is the restoration of high and sustained
rates of economic growth."

Full Employment: feasible and highly desirable

In a direct challenge to much publicized arguments
which forecast an era of "jobless growth", the ILO
emphasizes that there is little empirical basis for the
notion that globalization, technological change or
corporate downsizing are ushering in an era of jobless
growth or bringing about the end of work as most people
have known it.

The report attributes much popular theorizing about the
"end-of-work" and "jobless growth" to "unwarranted
extrapolations from dramatic episodes of corporate
downsizing, ignoring compensatory job creation
elsewhere in the economy".  These anxieties, the report
notes, are understandable "given the almost worldwide
deterioration of employment conditions", the size of
layoffs and "...the concentration of job losses in
particular economic sectors and communities."

"There has in fact been no generalized decline in the
employment intensity of economic growth in spite of
rising unemployment... Similarly, while there has been
some increase in self-employment, part-time work and
other non-standard forms of employment, this has not
meant the disappearance of regular jobs.  Data on job
tenure do not show any generalized decline in either
the period employed individuals have been with their
current employer or in projected future tenure.  At the
same time, there is also no evidence that the rate of
job change has increased in labour markets."

The ILO maintains that "the concept of full employment,
suitably updated, should remain as a principal
objective of economic and social policy".

Michel Hansenne warned against spurning the full
employment ideal that guided national and international
social policy in the post-WWII decades:  "Abandoning
the goal of full employment means lowering social
expectations at a time when the world economy is
becoming more integrated through trade and investment
flows".  "These forces," he said, "have the potential
for spurring higher rates of economic growth and job
creation and thus higher levels of well being and
social justice."  But they need to be harnessed by the
right mix of social and economic policies.

Trade, Technology and Globalization

The ILO argues that, contrary to popular
misconceptions, the world's job woes are not being
driven by rapid technological progress and trade
liberalization, both of which are necessary to
stimulating economic growth and productivity. Trade
between industrialized and developing economies "is
only a minor explanatory factor behind the rise in the
unemployment of low-skilled workers and in wage
inequality in the industrialized countries." The report
notes that the experience of dynamic Asian economies
provides evidence that "sound domestic policies,
expanding global trade and investment flows provide
rich opportunities for higher rates of economic growth
and job creation."

However powerful the forces of globalization the ILO
points out that it is not "an overwhelming supra-
national force" and that "national macroeconomic,
structural and labour-market policies are still the
dominant influence on economic and labour market
outcomes in any country." Even in an era inclined to
minimal government intervention "national policies can
and should, also give priority to mitigating the
negative social effects of globalization". Increased
international cooperation is also possible "especially
with respect to maintaining progress towards freer
trade and investment flows, reducing the risks of
instability to the financial system and preventing the
erosion of basic labour standards."

Boosting Non-inflationary Growth

Foremost among the requirements for reversing the drift
away from full employment is "to reverse the trend
decline in growth rates over the past two decades" in
industrialized countries. While much academic
literature maintains that expansionary efforts to boost
growth rates will inevitably founder on the rocks of
inflation or supply-side constraints, the ILO report
insists that a deficiency in demand could well be
responsible for the prolonged period of slow growth in
the world economy and that wage inflation can be held
in check if industrial practices and labour-market
regulations are designed to do so.

If countries are to begin creating jobs and reversing
wage inequality, it is necessary to increase economic
growth rates while strengthening institutional
mechanisms for moderating wage inflation and improving
the design and implementation of labour-market
policies, paying particular to the long-term
unemployed, says the ILO report.

The report says that "higher growth is possible
provided a sustained period of expansionary policies is
supported by credible policies to prevent a resurgence
of inflationary wage increases and to overcome the
skill shortages that will be generated."

Mechanisms for moderating wage inflation are the second
prerequisite if the expansionary impulse is to avoid
being choked off by the reaction of financial markets.
The report acknowledges that while no easy solutions
exist, several options are worth exploring, including
"strengthening of the coordination of wage bargaining
through the synchronization of bargaining periods and
the provision of consensus forecasts of future economic
possibilities." Other options include social pacts
between employers, workers and governments, the
encouragement of profit-sharing and tax-based incomes
policies.

The third requirement for reversing the rise in
unemployment is "to improve the design and
implementation of labour-market policies." In
industrialized countries this includes reforming
unemployment benefits systems. Subsidies and payroll
tax measures designed to promote the reintegration of
long-term unemployed may prove useful, but should be
examined carefully because of the possible side
effects. Additional measures include "the correction of
market failures which result from the underprovision of
training" as well as "training programmes targeted on
the most disadvantaged groups in the labour market."

The report maintains that the most often-cited solution
for problems linked to high unemployment, further
labour market deregulation, is not supported by
empirical evidence. While recognizing that there may
well be aspects of labour-market regulations that need
reforming in different countries, the report argues
that "there is no basis for a blanket presumption that
these regulations are invariably sources of rigidity
and that deregulation is automatically the optimal
solution." In many cases labour-market regulations have
the positive benefit of promoting higher productivity
and protecting vulnerable workers.

Transition Economies

The unemployment problem in transition economies
results from "the legacy of labour hoarding in state-
owned enterprises carried over from the previous
economic system." Although enterprises in Central and
Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have already
undertaken substantial restructuring, often at the cost
of increased unemployment and poverty, the report says
that "a formidable challenge still remains in terms of
restructuring uncompetitive enterprises and of
adjusting the structure of enterprises in order to
raise labour productivity."

Given the high and potentially intolerable social
tensions this is likely to generate, ILO underscores
the importance for these countries of choosing
"economic policies and labour-market institutions that
are most likely to reduce unemployment." Obstacles to
new enterprise development need to be reduced and
barriers to foreign investment (such as uncertain legal
procedures and inadequacies in the business
infrastructure) need to be dealt with. Other practical
problems include inadequate housing market flexibility
and the difficulty of ensuring adequate social
protection for workers affected by restructuring. An
array of measures, including an improved institutional
framework in which unions and employers' organizations
can undertake effective collective bargaining may need
to be supplemented by temporary measures to contain the
rise in unemployment.

Developing Economies

The majority of workers in developing countries "are
engaged in low-productivity work that is often
physically onerous but yet yields only meagre
earnings." Although the ILO report acknowledges that
full-employment is a long-term objective for most
developing countries, it nonetheless "provides a useful
framework for the formulation of employment policy."
The targets policy makers should aim for include "a
rate of growth of productive, modern-sector jobs that
exceeds the rate of growth of the labour force and a
reduction in the extent of underemployment in the rural
and urban informal sectors of the economy."

The report attributes the deteriorating employment
conditions in many parts of the developing world (other
than in the dynamic Asian economies) to "the failure to
recover fully from the economic crisis of the early
1980s. Slower, and in many cases, even negative growth
has meant stagnation in the creation of modern-sector
jobs and consequent overcrowding in low-productivity
activities.

The report calls for economic reforms, where necessary,
in order to achieve macroeconomic stability and begin
generating an "environment conducive to high savings
and investment and the efficient allocation of
resources" in order to permit developing countries to
"benefit fully from expanding trade and investment
flows in the global economy." The report adds that in
many cases "pure market reforms often need to be
supplemented by public investment and other measures to
strengthen the supply response of producers to new
economic incentives."

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