Unemployment, informality and inactivity
menace young people
in Latin America and the Caribbean
ILO calls for better use of the growth, development and poverty reduction
potential of 106 million youth in the region
SANTIAGO DE CHILE (ILO news) - 4 September 2007 Unemployment,
informality and inactivity endanger prospects of some 106 million young
people in Latin America and the Caribbean in the labour market, and
hinder potential economic growth and the fight against poverty in the
region, says a new report of the International Labour Office (ILO) issued
here today.
According to the report on Decent Work and Youth in Latin America (Note
1), 10 million young people in the region, or 16 per cent of the labour
force aged 15-24, are unemployed which is three times the adult rate.
Whats more, some 30 million young people work in the informal
economy mostly under bad working conditions, and some 22 million youth
neither work nor study due to lack of opportunities or frustration,
making them a social risk.
Young people are essential to integrate the region in the globalization
process, ILO Director-General Juan Somavia said. All over
the world, young women and young men, if they are given the opportunity,
make an important contribution as productive workers, employers, consumers,
members of civil society and agents of change.
Forced into unemployment, informal work or precarious employment
conditions, young people find themselves in a vicious circle of poverty
which affects their self-esteem, fosters alienation and reduces their
prospects, he added.
The report which contains analysis, discussion and proposals on how
to address the youth employment challenge in Latin America and the Caribbean,
was prepared as part of a process initiated with the presentation of
an Agenda for the Hemisphere during the regional meeting of the ILO
in 2006 when its member States decided to launch a Decent Work
Decade.
According to the report, persistent high unemployment rates and bad
working conditions of youth create a challenge calling for coherent
strategies instead of separate measures and an integrated and comprehensive
view instead of partial approaches.
The report reviews a series of initiatives that have been taken in
the region, discusses their potential and limitations, and makes specific
proposals on how to improve working conditions for young people.
"Young people invest their energy, talent and creativity in the
economy, and nobody can afford to loose this potential, the ILO
Director-General concluded.
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Note 1Juventud y Trabajo Decente, ILO, Lima, 2007, The report is available
at http://www.oit.org.pe/tdj.
For more information, please contact Luis Cordova at the ILO office
in Santiago de Chile, phone: +56 9 8199 3617, e-mail: prensa@oit.org.pe