ILO's 1992 World Labour Report
Rise in joblessness and exploitation
The International Labour Office's 1992 World Labour Report,
released last summer, is the first in a new series being published by the
organisation. Designed to reflect the current changes in the international
scene, the Report is divided into four chapters, dealing with the following
topics: human rights, employment, labour relations, and social protection and
working conditions. In a year of tremendous political upheavals and economic
recession, the 1992 Report makes grim reading for workers and trade union
activists across the globe. It is often a tale of murder and imprisonment, but
above all, of joblessness and exploitation, particularly of women and children,
under both democratic and dictatorial regimes.
Unemployment is inevitable at a time of recession, but the
breaktaking rate at which it is increasing (reflecting obviously the depth of
the crisis) is what the Report highlights with practically every part of the
world, except South-East Asia, severely affected.
Africa: a gloomy forecast
In Africa nine million people are currently unemployed in towns
and cities. In sub-Saharan Africa, the unemployed represent 18% of the urban
labour force up from 10% recorded in the mid-1970s. With the number of
productive jobs expected to increase by only 2.4% per annum by the end of this
decade, the number of the urban jobless is expected to rise from 9 million to 28
million (an increase of about 310%). Most of these people will be, as they are
today, young, educated men and women. The report observes the irony that 'while
education and training might be thought as the keys to future employment, in
fact in Africa the more educated you are, the less likely you are to find
suitable work'.
The continent's poor economic performance, the worst of any
region in the world, is, of course, largely to blame. But there is no denying
the fact that the systems of government introduced after independence have
contributed to the current situation. These were systems that muzzled trade
unionism in various ways, fostered corruption, nepotism and tribalism and
prevented workers and employers from working together for the good of society
and of the nation.
The report, however, welcomes the wave of democratisation
sweeping across Africa, which is already having a positive effect. 'There is a
trend now', it says, 'for governments to reduce their level of involvement in
labour issues and to allow or invite unions and employers to participate more to
resolve issues themselves... In this new environment trade unions have also
become more active. They are frequently the only mass organisations which cut
across tribal lines, so they can offer a political focus encountries where
opposition parties have previously been outlawed. Indeed they have often been
key actors in the transition to democracy'.
Mass labour migrations: need for planning and control
For parts of the world that have been used to full or near full
employment, the current situation must be particularly painful. Unemployment in
the industrialised market economies stands at 7%. Over 28 million people are out
of work in the 24 countries of the OECD.
In Eastern Europe the number of those without jobs will soon
reach 15-20% of the labour force as newly privatised industries shed excess
labour, and governments remain preoccupied with political stability.
Only in South-East Asia are there shortages of labour, the
report says. In Japan (1.46 vacancies for every job seeker), Singapore, Hong
Kong, South Korea and Taiwan, where low birth rates and increasing reluctance of
school-leavers to do menial and difficult tasks in factories and at construction
sites have left huge gaps in the labour market, there are now thousands of
overseas workers, most of whom are illegal immigrants from the Phillipines,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and other neighbouring countries. The report estimates that
of the 300 000 workers on the move in the Pacific Rim, half are illegal
immigrants
There are also large movements of migrant workers across Western
Europe, particularly from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. With the
latter countries unable to provide unemployment benefits or other forms of
social security and with wages eight or ten times higher in Western Europe than
those available at home, 20 million people could decide to move. The report
warns that such flows need to be planned and controlled to avoid serious
disruption, and regrets there is as yet no international agreement on how this
could be achieved.
Protection of workers and child labour
The report points out the risks being faced by organised labour
throughout the world: the violent deaths of trade unionists in Latin America and
their imprisonment and torture in a number of other countries, including the
Phillipines, China, Sudan and in Israel's occupied territories. These are the
heavy prices being paid to secure protection for workers.
Unfortunately many groups of workers continue to survive without
any protection whatsoever, among them child labourers, whose numbers are
increasing, not just in absolute terms but as a proportion of the world's
children. 'The exploitation of child labour is one of the most disturbing
aspects of the international labour scene,' the report laments. Employed to work
in all kinds of places - in quarries, mines, carpet factories, brothels, etc.,
they often earn as little as seven dollars a week for a 1 2-hour day.
Although exact figures are difficult to come by, the report
estimates that Asia has some of the highest numbers of child labourers - up to
11% of the total labour force in some countries. India probably has as many as
44 million. African countries are reported to have up to 20% of their children
working - about 17% of the total workforce. Twelve million children are said to
participate in various categories of work in Nigeria. Child labour is, of
course, not confined to the developing countries. 'Italy has some of the highest
numbers in Western Europe. Spain, too, has significant numbers. In the United
Kingdom, a survey in 1985 discovered 40% of children questioned were working,
the majority doing so illegally, either in terms of the hours they worked or the
jobs they were doing. In the United States, the majority of child workers are
employed in agriculture and a high proportion of these are from immigrant
families,' the report claims.
It recognises that, although poverty is the driving force behind
child labour, many children work because 'there is nothing else to do: schools
are unavailable, inadequate or too expensive'. However, the consequences of work
on the health of a child can be devastating. Soft bones can be deformed by long
hours of work and eyesight damaged by sustained concentration.
If children have to work, measures need to be taken to support
and protect them. The report cites the case of Brazil, where the Government
works with voluntary agencies in providing counselling and health services to
working children. However, in the immediate term, it recommends the removal of
children from dangerous sites and an end to their involvement in extremely
difficult tasks and immoral jobs. The long term aim, it says, must be the
elimination of child labour altogether. To this end there should be, as a first
step, the enactment and enforcement of legislation by governments limiting the
basic minimum age for work in all sectors of the economy.
Augustine
OYOWE