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BANGKOK
(ILO News) –
South Asia
’s
productivity levels have risen by around 50 per cent in the last
decade and the share of working poverty has “decreased
tremendously”, the International Labour Office (ILO) said in a new
report published today.
The
ILO report, “Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM), fifth
Edition” shows a rapid increase of productivity – measured as
output per person employed - in
South Asia
, from US$5,418 in 1996 to US$7,998 in 2006.
However, despite this
South Asia
’s workers still only produce one eighth of what a developed economy
worker does.
The
United States
still leads the world by far in labour productivity. Elsewhere in the
Asian region, East Asia’s
workers now produce twice as much as they did 10 years ago, the most
considerable productivity increases in the world. But this is still
only one fifth of what a worker in the developed economies produces.
In
South-East Asia
and the Pacific
labour productivity “was stagnant and much slower than other
regions” with an average annual increase of only 1.6 percent between
1996 and 2006 and workers in the region produced only a seventh of
their developed economy counterparts.
Increases in productivity are mainly the result of companies combining
capital, labour and technology better. A lack of investment in people
(training and skills), equipment and technology can lead to an
underutilization of the productive potential of labour and so
perpetuate poverty.
The
report found a positive trend in the amount of working poverty in
South Asia
, which fell from 56.6 per cent in 1996 to 33.5 per cent in 2006.
However the proportion of vulnerable employment – when a worker is
at risk of falling back into poverty - only decreased slightly, from
81.4 per cent to 78.2 per cent. Often these people work in the
informal economy and carry a higher risk of being without social
security or a voice at work.
The
report also found that half the workers in South Asia and
South East Asia
and the Pacific still work in agriculture. Many work long hours –
Bangladesh
and
Sri Lanka
are among six Asian countries where annual hours worked surpassed
2,200.
“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 ILO
Director-General Juan
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
person. Whereas the unemployed want to work but lack the opportunity
to do so, the working poor work but do not earn enough to escape
poverty.
In addition to 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. Within Asia the situation varies greatly; in South Asia
the gender gap is more than 45 percentage points while in
East Asia
it is less than 13 per cent. This shows that the potential of the
female labour force remains untapped.
“For
the time being
South Asia
has an enormous deficit in decent work, but if the region can manage
to develop, as has in recent years, it can reach the goal of halving
poverty. It could also further increase productivity levels which, in
turn, will possibly foster better jobs and hopefully further decrease
its share of workers in vulnerable employment,” the report says.
Worldwide,
the report shows that the productivity gap between the
US
and most other developed economies continued to widen. With US$ 63,885
of value added per person employed in 2006, the
United States
was followed at some distance in Asia by Hong Kong (US$56,223),
Australia
(US$48,694) and
Singapore
(US$ 47,975),
Sri Lanka
(US$11,32,),
Pakistan
(US$8,247),
India
(US$6,587) and
Bangladesh
(US43,315).
“The huge gap in productivity and wealth is cause for great
concern,” said Mr.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.”
The KILM uses 20 indicators including type,
status and levels of employment, remuneration and characteristics of
jobseekers. This fifth edition provides more insight into what
the ILO calls “decent work deficits” and the important role of
decent and productive work as a vehicle for poverty reduction. Decent
work is labour that is productive, delivers a fair income, security in
the workplace, social protection, and allows people to express their
concerns, organize and participate in the decisions that affect their
lives.
Afghanistan
,
Bangladesh
,
Bhutan
,
India
,
Maldives
,
Nepal
,
Pakistan
,
Sri Lanka
China
, Hong Kong SAR, DPR
Korea
,
Republic
of
Korea
, Macau SAR,
Mongolia
,
Taiwan
(
China
)
Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Lao PDR,
Malaysia, Myanmar, Pacific Island States, Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand, Viet Nam
For more information, please contact:
Neelam Agnihotri
ILO
Sub Regional Office for
South Asia
Sophy Fisher
Regional Office for
Asia
and the Pacific

+66 (0) 2288 2482
Krisdaporn Singhaseni
Regional Office for
Asia
and the Pacific

+66 (0) 2288 1664
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