Arab Times

Quality of jobs sliding for global workforce: ILO

Unemployme­nt slips by 2 million to 172 million in 2018

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GENEVA, Feb 13, (RTRS): Global progress in tackling unemployme­nt and the employment gender gap is stalling and the quality of jobs is getting worse, the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on said in an annual report on Wednesday.

Global unemployme­nt fell by 2 million to 172 million in 2018, finally returning to the 5.0 percent global unemployme­nt rate last seen before the global financial crisis a decade ago.

The rate is expected to improve to 4.9 percent this year and remain at that level until 2022, as highincome countries see further falls in unemployme­nt. However, the headline figure masks some worrying trends, the ILO said.

“A deteriorat­ing economic outlook is already affecting some emerging economies and this is raising unemployme­nt rates,” ILO Deputy Director-General Deborah Greenfield told a news conference.

ILO Research Director Damian Grimshaw said 2 billion people, or 61 percent of the global workforce, were in informal employment, typically vulnerable jobs with low pay and no social protection. In most countries, more than half of the agricultur­al workforce was in such jobs, the report said.

Government­s worldwide have signed up to the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, including a goal of attaining what it terms “decent” work for all by 2030. That goal seemed unrealisti­c for many countries, the report said.

The figures for informal employment showed it included more men in higher-income countries and more women in poorer countries.

Women overall were much less likely to be in the global labour market, with a 48 percent labour force participat­ion rate compared to 75 percent for men.

“The closing of the gender gap has stalled and this is definitely a cause for worry,” Greenfield said.

“Women also faced a higher risk of unemployme­nt in many regions and earn significan­tly less than men when they are in employment.”

Even advanced economies such as the Nordic countries were struggling to close the gender gap, she said.

The report also showed that the proportion of the global population in the labour market was shrinking, because people were living longer and more were retired, while young people were staying in education longer.

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