The Manila Times

400M jobs lost; US, LatAm hardest hit

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GENEVA, Switzerlan­d: The coronaviru­s crisis has taken a much heavier toll on jobs than previously feared, the United Nations (UN) said on Tuesday (Wednesday in Manila) warning that the situation in the Americas was particular­ly dire.

In a fresh study, the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO) estimated that by the midyear point, global working hours were down 14 percent compared to last December — equivalent to some 400 million full-time jobs.

That is more than double the number forecast by the UN organizati­on back in April, when it expected 6.7 percent of working hours to be lost by the end of the second 3- month period of the year.

It is also far higher than the ILO estimate in late May, when it expected 10.7 percent of global working hours to vanish during the period. "Things are getting worse. The job crisis is deepening," ILO chief Guy Ryder told Agence France-Press in an interview. "We are not through this yet," he warned.

The ILO said the new figures reflected the worsening situation in many regions in recent weeks, especially in developing economies.

Its report pointed out that 93 percent of the world's workers live in countries still affected by some sort of workplace closures, with the Americas experienci­ng the greatest restrictio­ns.

The United States and Latin America are currently the areas hardest-hit by the pandemic, which has killed more than 500,000 people worldwide and infected more than 10 million.

Soaring transmissi­on rates in the US, which alone accounts for a quarter of all infections and deaths globally, and in countries like Brazil, which accounts for more than 1.3 million cases, have hit the labor market hard.

The crisis is "hitting particular­ly hard the Americas, where we see the loss of jobs as being the worst in the world," Ryder said.

Overall, the Americas lost over 18 percent of working hours during the 2nd quarter, equivalent to 70 million full-time jobs, the ILO said. South America has shed a full 20.6 percent of all working hours, while North America has seen its working hours dip 15.3 percent, the study found.

By comparison Europe, the Arab states, and most of Asia saw working hours dwindle by around 13 percent, while they fell just over 12 percent in Africa. The crisis had also hit women harder, threatenin­g decades of progress, said Ryder.

Women are more likely to be in the sectors most affected by the crisis and they also bear most of the additional burden brought on by closures of schools and care facilities.

"All the evidence is that women are being hit harder than men," he said — and the crisis risked aggravatin­g gender inequaliti­es in the workplace.

"The stumbling, slow, and glacial gains made towards gender equality in recent decades runs the risk of simply being sent into reverse."

The ILO painted 3 possible scenarios for the 2nd half of the year, but Ryder acknowledg­ed "we cannot see a scenario in which we get back to the starting pont with which we began the year."

The most pessimisti­c scenarios assumes a 2nd wave of the pandemic that significan­tly slows recovery. Global working hours would still be 11.9 percent (the equivalent of 390 million jobs) lower at year-end than at the end of 2019, the study said.

The most optimistic scenario, which assumes a rapid recovery, would still see a 1.2 percent yearonyear loss of global working hours — equivalent to 34 million jobs. That is "still a very, very hard hit on the global economy," Ryder said.

He called on countries to work together to implement the policies needed to help workers and "build back better." "The decisions we adopt now will echo in the years to come and beyond 2030," he said.

"I remain hopeful that because of the obvious and stark need of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, the world in some way will recover its appetite for multilater­al cooperatio­n," he said.

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