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GENEVA (ILO News) – While productivity levels have increased worldwide
over the past decade, gaps remain wide between the industrialized
region and most others, although South Asia, East Asia, and Central
& South-Eastern Europe (non-European Union) & CIS have begun
to catch up, the International Labour Office (ILO) said in a new
report 1/ published today.
The ILO report, entitled “Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM),
fifth Edition” indicates that the U.S. still leads the world by far
in labour productivity per person employed in 2006 despite a rapid
increase of productivity in East Asia where workers now produce twice
as much as they did 10 years ago.
What’s more, the report also shows that the productivity gap between
the
US
and most other developed economies continued to widen. The
acceleration of productivity growth in the
US
has outpaced that of many other developed economies: With US$ 63,885
of value added per person employed in 2006, the
United States
was followed at a considerable distance by
Ireland
(US$ 55,986),
Luxembourg
(US$ 55,641),
Belgium
(US$ 55,235) and
France
(US$ 54,609).
However, Americans work more hours per year than workers in most other
developed economies. This is why, measured as value added per hour
worked,
Norway
has the highest labour productivity level (US$ 37.99), followed by the
United States
(US$ 35.63) and
France
(US$ 35.08).
Increase in productivity is mainly the result of firms better
combining capital, labour and technology. A lack of investment in
people (training and skills) as well as equipment and technology can
lead to an underutilization of the labour potential in the world.
“The huge gap in productivity and wealth is cause for great
concern,” said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia. “Raising the
productivity levels of workers on the lowest incomes in the poorest
countries is the key to reducing the enormous decent work deficits in
the world.”
In East Asia where productivity levels showed the fastest increase,
doubling in ten years, output per worker was up from one-eighth in
1996 to one-fifth of the level found in the industrialized countries
in 2006. Meanwhile, in South-East Asia & the Pacific productivity
levels were seven times less and in
South Asia
eight times less than in the industrialized countries, the report
reveals.
In the Middle East and Latin America & the Caribbean, the value
added per person employed is nearly three times less than it is in the
developed economies; in Central & South Eastern Europe (non-EU)
& CIS the level is 3.5 times less, and four times less in
North Africa
. The widest gap is observed in sub-Saharan
Africa
where the productivity level per person employed is one-twelfth of
that of a worker in the industrialized countries.
Substantial decent work deficits
This fifth edition of the KILM provides more insight and new
measurements on what the ILO calls “decent work deficits”
worldwide. Decent work is productive and delivers a fair income,
security in the workplace and social protection for families as well
as allowing people to express their concerns, organize and participate
in the decisions that affect their lives.
“Hundreds of millions of women and men are working hard and long but
without the conditions they need to lift themselves and their families
out of poverty; they risk falling deeper into poverty. Releasing their
underutilized capacities by raising their productive potential must be
at the top of the international development agenda,” said Mr.
Somavia.
According to the KILM, 1.5 billion people in the world – or one-third
of the working-age population – are “potentially underutilized”.
This new estimate of labour underutilization is comprised of the 195.7
million unemployed people in the world and nearly 1.3 billion working
poor who live with their families on less than US$ 2 per day per
family member. Whereas the unemployed want to work but lack the
opportunity to do so, the working poor are working but do not earn
enough to escape poverty.
The report also estimates that half of all women and men employed are
considered vulnerable to poverty. Viewed in a global perspective most
of these women and men work in the informal economy and carry a higher
risk of being unprotected, without social security and without a voice
at work. Over 70 per cent of the workers in sub-Saharan Africa and
South Asia
are in such vulnerable employment.
The report also notes that besides the underutilized labour force a
large number of people – about one-third of the working-age
population worldwide – are not participating in labour markets at
all. For the last 10 years this inactivity rate has remained much
higher for women than for men, with only two out of ten men of working
age inactive compared to five out of 10 women. This shows that a large
female labour force potential remains untapped.
The KILM, through publishing 20 indicators, covers many facets of
decent and productive work including: type and size of employment, the
lack of work and the characteristics of jobseekers, education, wages,
earnings and compensations costs, labour productivity and working
poverty. Taken together the KILM indicators give a strong foundation
from which to examine the relationships between poverty, decent work
deficits and labour underutilization.
For more information, please contact Laetitia Dard at dard@ilo.org
+4122/799-8272 or +4178/685-0117, or the Department of Communication
at communication@ilo.org
, +4122/799-7912.
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1/ Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM), Fifth Edition, International Labour Office,
Geneva
, 2007, www.ilo.org/trends.
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