The Phnom Penh Post

ILO: Asia-Pacific region sees 81M jobs lost in 2020

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A TOTAL of 81 million jobs are estimated to have been lost in Asia-Pacific countries this year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, says the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on (ILO).

In its “Asia-Pacific Employment and Social Outlook 2020: Navigating the crisis towards a human-centred future of work” report released on December 15, the organisati­on said the pandemic hit workers in various ways, with many forced into shorter working hours amid a shrinking job growth market.

In the report, it said it was “estimated that employment in the Asia and the Pacific region in 2020 will drop by 4.2 per cent to 1.839 billion persons from the pre-crisis estimate of 1.920 billion employed”.

By extrapolat­ion, this would imply “an expected jobs gap of 81 million across the region”.

“The impact of the crisis has been far-reaching, with underemplo­yment surging as millions of workers are asked to work reduced hours or no hours at all,” it said.

Working hours in the AsiaPacifi­c were reduced by an estimated 15.2 per cent in the second quarter of this year, and by 10.7 per cent in the third quarter, compared to before the pandemic, said ILO.

“Work i ng-hour losses a re a lso i nf luenced by t he millions of persons moving outside t he labour force or into unemploy ment as job creation in t he region collapsed,” it said, noting that the regional unemployme­nt rate could i ncrease to 5.2-5.7 per cent this year, compared to 4.4 per cent last year.

ILO assistant director-general and regional director for the Asia-Pacific, Chihoko Asada Miyakawa, said inadequate social security coverage and institutio­nal capacity in many countries had become a challenge to companies and workers needing to bounce back.

She said: “The situation [is] also exacerbate­d when a large number of workers remains in the informal economy.

“These pre-crisis weaknesses have left far too many exposed to the pain of economic insecurity when the pandemic hit and inflicted its toll on working hours and jobs.”

The report revealed that the crisis also saw a larger impact i n t he decl i ne of work i ng hours a nd employ ment on female workers.

“You ng people have a lso been especia l ly a f fected by working-hour and job losses. The youth share in the overall employment loss was three to 18 t i mes hig her t ha n t hei r share in tota l employment,” it said.

Senior economist at the ILO

Regional Off ice for t he AsiaPacif ic and lead aut hor of t he repor t, Sa ra Elder, sa id t hat young workers a re l i kely to find it difficult to compete for new jobs as unemploy ment increases.

“When they do find work, it may well be a job that does not match their aspiration­s.

“Mil l ions of women have a lso paid a high price and it cou ld ta ke yea rs for t hose who have ex ited t he labour force to return to full employment,” she said.

Wit h fewer pa id hours of work, the report revealed that median incomes are shrinking and working povert y levels increasing.

It said: “Labour income is estimated to have dipped by as much as 10 per cent in the AsiaPacifi­c region in the first three quarters of 2020, equivalent to a three per cent loss in gross domestic product [GDP].

“In absolute numbers, prel i mi na r y est i mates i n t he report f ind an additiona l 22 to 25 million persons could f a l l i nto work i ng pover t y, which wou ld push up t he total number of working poor [t hose l iv i ng on less t ha n $1.90 a day] in t he Asia-Pacific region to bet ween 94 and 98 million in 2020.”

However, Elder added that g o v e r n ment e f f o r t s h a d help e d c ompa n ie s r e t a i n workers, a lbeit wit h reduced hours, which had prevented wider job losses.

She said: “Given the mounting evidence that social protection and employment policies save jobs and incomes, the hope is that the crisis brings about a more permanent and increased investment in elements needed to boost resilience and promote a more peoplecent­red future of work.”

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