Business World

Getting out of the crisis requires an approach that would lead to job creation and quality economic growth.

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people and provide them with opportunit­ies to lift themselves and their families out of poverty is an important step to address the rising number of working poor and vulnerable employment,” he added.

Commenting on the report, Trade Union Congress of the Philippine­s Secretary- General Ernesto F. Herrera said: “The emerging trend is a consequenc­e of high unemployme­nt which occurred due to [the] scarcity of work ... the government should ensure the creation of more jobs to stimulate the economy.”

Latest data from the National Statistics Office puts the country’s unemployme­nt rate at 6.9% as of July this year, down from 7.6% a year earlier. The figure is equivalent to 2.7 million without work out of the 60.9 million population 15 years old and above.

The ILO said that while employment in emerging and developing countries has resumed growing, over eight million new jobs are still needed to return to pre-crisis levels in those countries.

“The longer the labor market recession, the greater the difficulti­es for jobseekers to obtain new employment,” the ILO said, adding that in the “35 countries for which data exists, nearly 40% of jobseekers have been without work for more than one year and therefore run significan­t risks of demoraliza­tion, loss of self- esteem and mental health problems.”

“Importantl­y, young people are disproport­ionately hit by unemployme­nt.”

Among the key findings of the ILO study, which used data from 150 countries, were: [BU] cases of social unrest have been noted in at least 25 countries, many of them advanced economies; [BU] many countries that experience­d jobs growth at the end of 2009 have now seen the recovery weakening; [BU] in over three quarters of the 82 countries with available data, people were saying that their quality of life had declined; [BU] satisfacti­on at work has deteriorat­ed, with “a sense of unfairness” growing in 46 of 83 countries; and [BU] in 36 of 72 countries, people had less confidence in government­s.

The lead author of the report, Internatio­nal Institute director Raymond Torres, said the two main factors behind the bleaker outlook are the withdrawal of stimulus measures in countries where the recovery remains weak and the failure to address the root causes of the financial crisis.

“The coexistenc­e of private debt-led growth in certain developed countries with export- led growth in large emerging economies has proved to be the Achilles heel of the world economy,” the report said. “Recovery will be fragile as long as labor incomes continue to grow less than justified by productivi­ty developmen­ts and the financial system remains dysfunctio­nal.”

Getting out of the crisis, the ILO said, requires an approach that would lead to job creation in the short term and quality economic growth in the long term. This should include the strengthen­ing of job-centered policies, a closer link between wages and productivi­ty gains, and a true financial reform plan.

“Fairness must be the compass guiding us out of the crisis,” ILO Director- General Juan Somavia said. “People can understand and accept difficult choices, if they perceive that all share in the burden of pain.”

“Government­s should not have to choose between the demands of financial markets and the needs of their citizens.”

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