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Context
- The Global Commission on the Future of Work, established on Monday, has a critical role in addressing the decent jobs deficit that affects the lives of roughly three billion working people.
International Labour Organisation (ILO)
- The body, which includes two representatives from India, is to present a report at the 2019 commemoration of the centenary of the International Labour Organisation (ILO).
- Recent dialogues will be building on over 100 states on the implications for individuals and societies from the changing dynamics of work, production processes and rapid technological transformation.
Challenges
- The ILO’s ongoing assessment of major trends in different segments of the employment scenario points to the challenges that lie ahead and the adaptations required to advance its broader mission to promote social justice.
- The far-reaching alterations witnessed in the means of production and access to mobile information and communication technologies have created a flexible overall work environment.
- These applications permit relative independence from the rigid office settings and make room for people to function with autonomy and even achieve a better work-life balance.
- With an increasingly competitive economic climate, these same developments consistently entail more intense activity and longer hours.
- There is acceleration which is in the demand for industrial robots, at an annual rate of 9% since 2011, making the upgradation of human skills imperative upon corporations and governments alike.
- In the manufacturing sector, where two-thirds of them are concentrated, the robot density one machine deployed per 1,000 employees, in 2015. The number was at 14 in the advanced world and two in developing countries.
- Harnessing the opportunities from these new technologies and mitigating the human costs from this unfolding transformation is a function of recognizing the rights and responsibilities of individuals and employers.
- In 2016, less than half of all women in the working age bracket were engaged in the labour market, compared to over 75% among men.
- Worse, this situation is projected to persist over the next 15 years. Similarly, declining ratios of the population in the working age are expected to exacerbate the challenge of care for the elderly.
- Persistently high levels of unemployment since the global financial crisis perhaps encapsulate most of these concerns.
- The growth in international migration by as much as 50% since 1990 and the rise of xenophobia in many parts of the world illustrate the dangers from the lopsided trajectory of the current phase of globalization.
Factors affecting these challenges
- The first is the continued exclusion of about 50% of the global labour force from the formal sector of employment, with all-round insecurity.
- The other is the absence of meaningful social protection coverage for the majority of the world population.
- Only 27% has recourse to comprehensive minimum support. Given this backdrop, the 2019 centenary must necessarily be more than an occasion for ceremony and symbolism.
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