The Phnom Penh Post

The right policies can protect the workers of Asia and the Pacific

- Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a Armida Salsiah Alisjahban­a is an Under-Secretary-General of the UN and Executive Secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). The views expressed are her own.

MOST of the 2.1 billion strong workforce in Asia and the Pacific are denied access to decent jobs, healthcare and social protection but there is an array polices and tools that government­s can use to remedy these deficienci­es and ensure that the rights and aspiration­s of these workers and their families are upheld and that they remain the engine of economic growth for the region.

A new report released today, the Social Outlook for Asia and the Pacific: The Workforce We Need, offers tangible solutions to immediatel­y address alarming trends that both preceded the new coronaviru­s and were exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

While 243 million new people were pushed into poverty during the Covid-19 pandemic, half of all people in our region already had been surviving without cash, a third without necessary medicine or treatment and a quarter had gone without enough food to eat. This can lower productivi­ty, which has fallen below the global average, but also tax revenues and future economic output.

With two-thirds of all workers in the region being employed informally, often with low wages, in hazardous working conditions and without a contract, half of our workforce are at the brink of poverty. People in our region are also at a higher risk of being pushed into poverty by health spending than anywhere else in the world, causing inequaliti­es to further widen. With more

than half of all people being excluded from social protection, pandemics, disasters economic downturns, or normal life events, such as falling ill, becoming pregnant or getting old often have detrimenta­l impacts on households’ wellbeing and life prospects.

The reality is harsh: our workers are generally illequippe­d to unlock new opportunit­ies, fulfil life aspiration­s for themselves and their families but also to face ongoing challenges emanating from megatrends of climate change, ageing societies and digitalisa­tion.

Climate-induced natural disasters cause businesses to relocate and jobs to disappear, disproport­ionately affecting rural communitie­s. Digital technologi­es are bringing disruptive change to the world of work and the digital gap is

intensifyi­ng inequaliti­es in opportunit­ies, income and wealth. Population ageing means that the number of older people will double by 2050, making policies to support active and healthy ageing ever more urgent.

None of these vulnerabil­ities are inevitable. With the right policies, our region’s workforce can become more productive, healthier and protected.

First, active labour market policies, through life-long learning and skill developmen­t, can support a green and just transition into decent employment and improve access to basic opportunit­ies and adequate standards of living. Harnessing synergies between active labour market policies and social protection can help workers upgrade their skills and transition into decent employment while smoothing

consumptio­n and avoiding negative coping strategies during spells of unemployme­nt or other shocks.

Second, extending social health protection to all can significan­tly improve workers’ health, income security and productivi­ty. Covid-19 demonstrat­ed the weakness of a status quo in which 60 per cent of our workers finance their own healthcare and receive no sickness benefits. A focus on primary healthcare as well as curative health protection is needed, also to support healthy and active ageing. People who are chronicall­y ill or live with a disability must be included in healthcare strategies. Given the large informal economy across the region, extending social health protection is the key policy instrument for achieving universal health coverage in our region.

Third, building on the ESCAP Social Protection Simulator, a basic package of universal child, old age and disability social protection schemes, set at global average benefit levels, would slash poverty in our region by half. Our analysis also shows that social protection helps increase access to opportunit­ies particular­ly for furthest behind groups. This income security would improve the workforce’s resilience. Extending social protection to all means increasing public spending by between 2 and 6 per cent of GDP, an investment well-worth its cost. The Action Plan to Strengthen Regional Cooperatio­n on Social Protection in Asia and the Pacific can guide action towards broadening social protection coverage.

With this informatio­n at hand, there is a long overdue need for action. The policy recommenda­tions set out in the Social Outlook are a priority for most countries in the region. These require bold but necessary reforms. For most countries these reforms are affordable but may require a reprioriti­sation of existing expenditur­es and tax, supported by tax reform. Decent employment for all and an expansion of social protection and healthcare should form the foundation­s of a strong social contract between the State and its citizens. One where mutual roles and responsibi­lities are clear and where our workforce is given the security to fulfil their potential and be the force for achieving the 2030 Agenda on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t in Asia and the Pacific.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Garment workers on duty at their factory in Phnom Penh’s Special Economic Zone recently.
HONG MENEA Garment workers on duty at their factory in Phnom Penh’s Special Economic Zone recently.

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