Tuesday 24 January 2006 (ILO/06/01)
GENEVA (ILO News) - The number of people unemployed worldwide climbed
to new heights in 2005, as robust economic growth failed to offset an
increase in people seeking work - especially among the vast and growing
legion of jobless youth, the International Labour Office (ILO) said
in its annual Global Employment Trends (Note 1)
released today.
What's more, the ILO report said the weakness of most economies to
turn GDP growth into job creation or wage increases, coupled with a
spate of natural disasters and rising energy prices, hit the world's
working poor especially hard.
The ILO trends report showed that despite 4.3 per cent global GDP growth
in 2005, only 14.5 million of the world's more than 500 million extreme
working poor were able to rise above the US$1 per day, per person poverty
line.
In addition, in 2005, of the more than 2.8 billion workers in the world,
1.4 billion still did not earn enough to lift themselves and their families
above the US$2 a day poverty line - just as many as 10 years ago, the
ILO said.
"This year's report shows once again that economic growth alone
isn't adequately addressing global employment needs. This is holding
back poverty reduction in many countries," said ILO Director-General
Juan Somavia. "We are facing a global jobs crisis of mammoth proportions,
and a deficit in decent work that isn't going to go away by itself.
We need new policies and practices to address these issues."
According to official estimates, the unemployment rate remained unchanged
after two successive years of decline at 6.3 per cent. The total number
of jobless stood at 191.8 million people at the end of 2005, an increase
of 2.2 million since 2004 and 34.4 million since 1995. The ILO said
that while more people are actually "in work", at the same
time, more people are unemployed than ever before (Note
2).
The ILO report said almost half of the world's unemployed are young
people aged 15 to 24, and that they are more than three times as likely
as adults to be out of work. The ILO called this figure "troublesome",
given that youth make up only 25 per cent of the working-age population.
Significantly, the ILO found that the share of total employment in
services increased in all regions over the last 10 years with one exception
- the Middle East and North Africa. If the service sector continues
to grow the way it has over the last ten years, it will soon overtake
agriculture as the largest provider of employment, the report said.
"Given these trends, there is a need to reformulate development
and growth strategies", Mr. Somavia said. "In many countries,
agricultural workers are leaving a life of rural poverty in the hope
of finding something better in the city but end up little or no better
off in casual labouring jobs or petty trading. Such issues need to be
addressed by policy makers if they are to make sure that the development
process will lead to poverty reduction."
The report also found that the employment gap between women and men
has narrowed over the past decade, but remains wide. In 2005, 52.2 per
cent of adult women were in employment, compared with 51.7 per cent
in 1995. In 2005, women made up approximately 40 per cent of the world's
labour force.
According to the report, the trend of women who are active in the labour
market differed by region. While the number of active women in Latin
America and the Caribbean decreased, the Middle East and North Africa
witnessed an increase of female participation from very low levels.
Overall, the trend of increasing labour force participation rates among
women of the 1980s and early 1990s has come to a halt in regions such
as South-East Asia and South Asia and has even reversed in Central and
Eastern Europe (non-EU) and the CIS countries, East Asia and Sub-Saharan
Africa.
Regional trends
The largest increase in unemployment occurred in Latin America and the
Caribbean, where the number of unemployed rose by nearly 1.3 million
and the unemployment rate increased by 0.3 percentage points between
2004 and 2005 to 7.7 per cent. Also the Central and Eastern Europe (non-EU)
and CIS region witnessed a year-over-year increase in unemployment,
which stood at 9.7 per cent, up from 9.5 per cent in 2004.
In developed economies and the European Union (EU) unemployment rates
declined from 7.1 per cent in 2004 to 6.7 per cent in 2005.
Unemployment rates in Asian Sub-regions did not change markedly. East
Asia's unemployment rate was 3.8 per cent, thereby remaining the lowest
in the world. South Asia's unemployment rate was 4.7 per cent and South-East
Asia and the Pacific's was 6.1 per cent.
At 13.2 per cent in 2005, the Middle East and North Africa remained
the region with the highest unemployment rate in the world. Sub-Saharan
Africa's rate stood at 9.7 per cent, the second highest in the world.
The region also had the highest share in working poverty, underscoring
that tackling the decent work deficit is most urgently needed there.
Employment-to-population ratios - the share of people employed within
the working age population - varied between regions. East Asia had the
highest ratio with 71.1 per cent in 2005 but was also the region with
the biggest change in its ratio over the last 10 years, with a drop
of 3.5 percentage points. The Middle East and North Africa region had
the lowest ratio, at 46.4 per cent in 2005.
In all regions, working poverty at the US$1 level declined in 2005
except in Sub-Saharan Africa where it increased by another 2.5 million
and the Middle East and North Africa where it stayed more or less unchanged.
The total number of US$2 a day working poverty only declined in Central
and Eastern Europe (non-EU) and CIS, Latin America and the Caribbean,
and most considerably in East Asia. On the other hand, it increased
in South-East Asia and the Pacific, South Asia, the Middle East, North
Africa and especially Sub-Saharan Africa.
According to the report, the impact of high energy costs on poverty
and employment varied by region. In Asia - a region well on track to
attaining the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving-poverty by
2015 - the impact will only become considerable if higher energy costs
are sustained. In Sub-Saharan Africa - a region that is already off-track
regarding the poverty MDG - the likely short-term impacts of higher
energy costs are considerable and, in the long run, could dampen the
hopeful signs some countries have seen recently.
The report also addresses the importance of job creation and labour
market recovery after natural disasters and the changes resulting from
the new quota-free textile and clothing trade regime that concern millions
of workers and hundreds of thousands of enterprises in both developed
and developing countries.
"Economic shocks as well as natural disasters hit those who are
already poor disproportionately hard, and, in the recovery process,
they are the last to return to pre-shock conditions. The current pattern
of globalization continues to have an uneven social impact with some
experiencing rising living standards and others being left behind",
commented Juan Somavia.
According to the report, recognition that poverty reduction can only
be reached via the route of more and better jobs is more widespread
today, especially in Africa. Increased awareness of the importance of
placing employment at the centre of economic and social policy-making,
symbolized by the UN Summit in 2005, is an important step forward, said
the report.
_______________________
Note 1 - Global Employment Trends Brief, January
2006, International Labour Office, Geneva.
Note 2 - The expression "in work" summarizes all people employed
according to the ILO definition, which includes self-employed, employed,
employers as well as unpaid family members. The words "employed"
and "in work" are used as synonyms here.
Further information: http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inf/pr/2006/1.htm