Vagaries of the job market
The mismatch between the number of people who
annually reach working age and the availability of jobs has been a
matter of constant concern globally during the better part of the period
since the global financial crisis of the last decade. The International Labour Organisation’s latest forecast
that a few more millions are set to join the pool of the jobless during
this year and the next, is in line with its own previous estimates. In
any case, with the growth in global gross domestic product registering a
six-year low in 2016, expectations of generation of new jobs were
always going to be low. But a no-less-serious concern in the ‘World
Employment and Social Outlook 2017’ pertains to the stubborn challenge
of reducing the extent of vulnerability that currently affects about 42
per cent of the total working population. This concern refers to lack of
access to contributory social protection schemes among the
self-employed and allied categories, unlike their counterparts in the
wage-earning and salaried classes. The former segment accounts for
nearly 50 per cent of workers in the emerging economies and 80 per cent
in developing countries. The hardships faced by these 1.4 billion
working people will become more apparent when seen in the backdrop of
either the absence of strong welfare legislation or its effective
enforcement in a majority of these countries. It is no surprise that
besides Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia has been the most affected by
such volatile conditions.
To
be sure, the overall share of these vulnerable workers dropped from 46
per cent of total employment in 2015 to 42 per cent in 2016. But the
latest report projects only a mere 0.2 percentage point rate of
reduction through 2017-18. In comparison, it says the proportion of the population in jobs
characterised by vulnerability declined by an average annual rate of 0.5
percentage points in the previous decade. As a result of the relatively
slow reversal rates in more recent years, these numbers are projected
to increase globally by 11 million a year. The other implication of an
increase in the number of people facing vulnerable working conditions is
the real danger this poses of a slowdown in reducing the incidence of
working poverty. It is this celebrated rise in income levels in the
lowest rungs of the population that lent the current phase of
globalisation the social and political legitimacy, a phase that has
otherwise posed the risks of economic dislocation and unprecedented mass
migration. The challenge for policymakers worldwide is to ensure that
incomes do not fall below the levels of basic subsistence as the world
marches towards the poverty reduction targets under the 2030 Sustainable
Development Goals.Source: The Hindu, 17-01-2017