Everybody
now recognises that the global economic crisis is far
from over, and that we are now entering Act 2 of what
may well turn out to be a drama of multiple acts. But
in fact some analysts have been pointing out that even
the economic recovery that was quickly hailed in 2010,
especially in emerging markets, has hardly been evident
as far as labour market conditions are concerned.
A new document from the ILO (''Short-term employment
and labour market outlook and key challenges in G20
countries'', ILO and OECD September 2011) makes official
what many had suspected for a while now: the global
recovery from the Great Recession was much less of a
recovery in terms of employment, and even this is massively
threatened by the ongoing economic instability and gloomy
future prospects for output expansion. The paper, prepared
for the G20 meeting in late September in Paris, summarises
recent data on output and employment in G20 countries
to arrive at the dire conclusion that, despite regional
and national variations, the outlook for employment
growth is poor across all the G20 countries.
In the temperate language beloved of institutional institutions,
the report notes that ''all G20 countries are facing
substantial labour market challenges to promote productive
employment and decent work opportunities for all. Some
of these have arisen during the crisis and early phases
of the recovery; others reflect longer-term structural
issues that require further policy attention.'' (page
1)
Recent data on employment are available from 17 of the
G20 countries. (China, India and Saudi Arabia still
do not collect or even estimate annual or quarterly
data on employment, unlike all other G20 countries).
They show that labour market performance relative to
the pre-crisis situation is highly differentiated across
the G20 countries. In the three years to the first quarter
of 2011, 13 countries showed an overall decline in the
employment to working-age population rate and only five
showed an increase.
Four countries showed relatively strong growth in employment
rates and declines in unemployment rates: Turkey, Brazil,
Germany and Indonesia. Russia showed a slight increase
in the employment rate, but also an increase in the
unemployment rate. In other countries, the change in
the employment rate has been negative since 2008 and
the unemployment rate has increased, in some countries
(like Spain, United Kingdom and United States) by more
than 50 per cent.
Long-term unemployment (unemployment of 12 months or
more) has risen in 15 of the 17 countries (with Mexico
and Brazil being the exceptions). It began to rise sharply
in 2010 in several countries, some quarters after short
term unemployment peaked, as many workers who lost their
jobs in the recession were unable to find other jobs
in the recovery. Long-term unemployment increased most
sharply in Canada, Spain, UK and US (where the share
of long-term unemployed tripled to reach a historic
high of more than 33 per cent in early 2011). It is
very high in South Africa (68.3 per cent), Italy (50
per cent) and Germany (47.3 per cent) and above 40 per
cent in France, Spain and Japan.
This is likely to lead to future declines in labour
force participation because of what is known as the
''discouraged worker effect'', which means that future
unemployment rates may not even reflect the existence
of these discouraged and probably disgruntled potential
workers.
Also, as the ILO notes, labour market slack goes beyond
unemployment and also includes under-employment – and
this is especially marked in countries with large informal
sectors, including most of the emerging market members
of the G20. In countries like India, it is well known
that the lack of adequate unemployment benefits, insurance
and other worker protection typically means that open
unemployment is not a viable option and workers have
no choice but to keep engaging in some activity, often
very informal and low-paying. The crisis worsened conditions
of work in all the G20 countries, and the recovery has
not led to things becoming better. In many of the advanced
G20 economies, a significant and often growing share
of the workforce is employed on temporary contracts.
One particularly worrying feature of recent trends is
the growth of youth unemployment. The report notes that
youth have been hard hit by the global economic crisis
in all G20 countries: they were among the first to lose
their jobs in the downturn, and since then, for many
new entrants into the labour market, job opportunities
have been scarce. In all G20 countries, youth unemployment
is twice or three times the adult unemployment rate
and has increased further during the crisis.
All this points to a significant underutilisation of
labour resources, which has been accentuated by the
inadequate use of women workers in paid productive work.
Participation rates of prime-age women are lower than
those of prime-age men in all G20 countries and very
significantly lower in Saudi Arabia, Turkey and India.
So the report points to two key challenges for global
policy makers: better utilisation of labour resources
and better quality jobs.
The crisis and post-crisis pattern has also been one
of growing inequality in earnings of different categories
of workers. In many G20 countries, earnings inequality
has increased over the past 20 years. With very few
exceptions (France and Japan), earnings of the 10 per
cent best-paid workers have risen relative to those
of the 10 per cent least-paid workers. In most countries,
wage disparities grew more in the upper half of the
distribution than in the bottom half, indicating the
professional workers (often in the finance sector) experienced
significant increases in earnings even as real wages
of other workers fell.
So the global picture is worrisome indeed. Even before
the current instability, labour markets that had almost
collapsed in terms of demand during the global crisis
have not recovered adequately to improve employment
prospects, wages and working conditions of the bulk
of workers. And now we almost certainly face another
global recession (and possible prolonged depression)
and definitely uncertain global markets, in which jobs
are likely to become even more scarce, fragile and vulnerable.
Although India is little mentioned in this report, because
of the lack of recent data, most of these processes
across most of the G20 countries find strong resonance
in India. We know from NSSO data that the employment
rate from the 15 plus age group declined from 56 per
cent in 2004-05 to 54 per cent in 2007-08 (just before
the crisis) to 52 per cent in 2009-10, a significant
decline. The unemployment rate also declined slightly
in India in 2009-10, reflecting the increased education
involvement of youth aged 15-24 years. Meanwhile, the
output recovery in manufacturing and services after
the global downturn in 2008-09 has not been accompanied
by equivalent employment recovery. Even those who have
got their jobs back have faced declining real wages
and increased working hours.
This is confirmed by countless case studies from all
over India, including those capturing the plight of
migrant workers who had found work in export-oriented
activities during the boom of the past decade. Consider
this recent report from P. Sainath: 'The economic crisis
of 2008 saw the closure of countless power loom units
in Gujarat. Yet in 2009, over 5,000 'unreserved' travellers
from Ganjam, Orissa, still boarded trains for Gujarat
almost every day at the Berhampur railway station. These
were and are mostly labourers migrating for work in
Surat and Mumbai. ''Our employers [in Surat] know we
have few options,'' says Ganesh Pradhan in Ganjam. There
are no days off, no recess, and 12-hour shifts. ''Work
is up, pay is down. The lunch break has gone…we're losing
money and strength…. [But] it's not as if we know that
things are much better anywhere else.'' (''Decadal journeys:
debt and despair spur urban growth'', P. Sainath, The
Hindu 26 September 2011)
This is clearly an economic crisis of major magnitude,
which in turn portends social and political crises that
are just waiting to happen. In this dire context, it
is really surprising to see that lack of urgency being
displayed by G20 leaders.
*
This article was originally published in the Frontline-
Volume 28, Issue 21, October 08-21, 2011.