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This article highlights recent developments in labor market statistics and the importance of measuring decent work. It discusses the commitments and initiatives of the International Labour Office (ILO) in monitoring progress towards decent work and addresses emerging topics in labor statistics. The article also introduces the Working Group for the Advancement of Employment & Unemployment Statistics, which aims to improve statistical methods and products related to decent work.
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Recent Developments in the Labour Market Statistics Rafael Diez de Medina Chief Statistician, Director Department of Statistics International Labour Office First Al Khawarezmi Conference Doha, Qatar- 6 December 2010
Labour statistics • Historically, labour market statistics have taken a macro-perspective on an economy and focused on: • Labour supply and labour demand in an economy • Employment and unemployment statistics; ICLS 1925 ... 1998) • Volume of work and labour cost in an economy • Statistics of wages and hours of work (ICLS 1923, 1925 ...) • Classifications: • Classification of industries and occupations (ICLS 1923, 1925 …) • International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO) (ICLS 1949, ..., 1988, 2008) • International classification according to status in employment (ICSE) (ICLS 1957, 1993, 1998)
ILO concept of decent work The concept of Decent Work has been defined by the ILO and endorsed by the international community as “Opportunities for women and men to obtain decent and productive work in conditions of freedom, equity, security and human dignity”. (Juan Somavia, ILO Director-General, 1999 ILC Report).
Decent work as a global goal • Decent work dimensions have not been adequately covered in the past system of labour statistics. • Endorsed by ECOSOC, Presidential Summits and Head of State Summits in all regions, UN system, European Union, etc. • ILO Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization (2008) endorses Decent Work Agenda: • (i) Rights at work, (ii) Employment; (iii) Social Protection; (iv) Social Dialogue and tripartism.
WhyDecentWorkmeasures are important? • Labour marketdistressisrising and this trend will continue wellinto 2011 and further. • Unemploymentwhichstoodat over 6% early in the decadebeforedecreasingbetween 2004 and 2007, has sinceincreaseddramatically to reach about 10% on average in 2010. • Relative to 2007, in 2010, there are 31 million more unemployed (209 million unemployed), the highesteverrecorded. • Danger of long-term damage to job prospects and productivity of currentcohort of youth. • Strain on statisticalresources to address the urgent decentworkdeficit
Labour Statistics and Decent Work: commitments to monitor progress towards decent work • 2008 Declaration on Social Justice for a Fair Globalization recommends that ILO Members may consider: • “the establishment of appropriate indicators or statistics, if necessary with the assistance of the ILO, to monitor and evaluate the progress made” • Monitoring of MDG Goal 1, Target 2: • Achieve full and productive employment and decent work for all, including women and young people. • StrategicpartnershipswithNSOs, Ministries of Labour, Social Security institutions, International organizations, developmentbanks, Academia, workers’ and employers’ organizations, etc.
Topicswhichhavegainedprominenceduringthejobs crisis • Growingworldlabourforce: needtohavebetterestimates • Informality • Youthunemployment • Discouragedworkers • Sectorial labourstatistics • Labourmigration • Wageinequality • Rise of insecureforms of work (hours of work, selfemployment, temporarycontracts) • Labour share, Productivity and Labourcosts • Impact of stimuluspackages
How the ILO is moving forward (i) Creation of the ILO Department of Statisticsreportingtothe DG (2009) New mandate: assuringquality in statisticalmethods and products, promotingcoordination and coherencewithinthedifferent ILO units (childlabour, labourmarkettrends, social protectiondatabases, regional informationsystems, etc.) Enhancing data compilationto cope withincreaseddemand (short-term and annual data) Development of new user-friendly, interactive ILO statisticaldatabase and portal Collection of DecentWorkIndicatorsfrom as manycountreis as possible
How the ILO is moving forward (ii) Development and application of time-series techniques at theinternationallevel (outliers, seasonaladjustment, etc.) StrengtheningILO’stechnicalassistancetodevelopingcountries, includingpreparation of manuals, such as “Surveys of Informal Employment and Informal Sector” (end of 2010). ”Capacitybuildingtohelpconstituents (NSOs, Ministries of Labour, Social Security Institutions, workers’ and employers’ organisations, etc.) Active involvement in the G20 reporting and discussion Statisticalbackgroundto IMF/ILO conference in Oslo highlighinglabour’s role in emergingfromthe crisis Launching of WorkingGroupstodiscussemergingtopicsforthe 19th ICLS (2013): themeasurement of labourunderutilization and International Classification of Status in Employment (revision)
Working Group for the Advancement of Employment & Unemployment Statistitics Purpose To assist the ILO Department of Statistics with the advancement of employment and unemployment statistics through developmental work on topics relevant to a possible revision or supplementation of the 13th ICLS (1982) Resolution on statistics of the economically active population, employment, unemployment and underemployment, such as the development of measures of labour underutilization to supplement the unemployment rate.
Working Group for the Advancement of Employment & Unemployment Statistitics Important The consultations that the Department has conducted confirmed that that the current labour force framework remains relevant and adequate for the production of labour force statistics. However, there is need to render the framework more versatile (i.e. by developing new supplementary measures) and clear (through clarification of ambiguities in existing guidelines) so that it can continue to be relevant to recent labour market developments and policy priorities.
Working Group for the Advancement of Employment & Unemployment Statistitics (Cont’d) • Main expected outputs • To be submitted to the 19th ICLS for consideration and possible adoption: • Draft international statistical standard on (a) measure(s) of labour underutilization to supplement the unemployment rate • Draft recommendations for a possible revision or supplementation of the 13th ICLS (1982) Resolution on statistics of the economically active population, employment, unemployment and underemployment
Working Group for the Advancement of Employment & Unemployment Statististics (Cont’d) Current WG membership Members are expert statisticians from NSO with in-depth knowledge of/experience in labour force statistics Chair: Statistics South Africa 45 confirmed members from 30 countries or areas +5 observers from Afristat, Eurostat, OECD At present, there are no representatives from the Arab countries (other than West Bank and Gaza strip)
Access by invitation only (WG members), requires a user id and password Searchable and accessible only by registered WG members Registered WG members agree to treat all content as confidential To become a WG member, sent request to ILO Department of Statistics with name & affiliation of nominee expert labour statistician EMPSTATS online platform http://papyrus.ilo.org/empstats/EMPSTATS ILO Department of Statistics
Enhancing data compilationto cope withincreaseddemand: short-termindicators
Enhancing data compilationto cope withincreaseddemand: annual data, includingDecentWorkindicators Revision and restructuring of the current ILO statistical database (LABORTSA) and Merging of the KILM database with a new database of the Department of Statistics with relevant modifications and improvements of the former. The ILO October Inquiry discontinued and a new product developed using the DELPHI Survey exercise integrated into the new database. The ILO Decent Work statistical indicators database set up, covering as many countries as possible
Principles and framework for measuring decent work • Purpose: (i) to assist constituents to assess progress towards decent work (PRS, National development frameworks and DWCP) and (ii) to offer comparable information for analysis and policy development. • NO ranking of countries & NO composite index. • Needs to cover all four dimensions of Decent Work derived from various sources: household and establishment surveys, administrative records, qualitative information, among others. • New framework recommended by the 18th ICLS • Model of international relevance that permits the adaptation to national circumstances • Has the potential to evolve dynamically over the years. • A layered approach to indicators: Main, Additional, Context, Future and Legal Framework indicators
Grouping of Decent Work Indicators • Grouping of indicators under 10 substantive elements of the Decent Work Agenda plus one area on economic and social context: • 1. Employment opportunities (1 + 2) • 2. Adequate earnings and productive work (1 + 3) • 3. Decent hours (1 + 3) • 4. Combining work, family and personal life (1 + 3) • 5. Work that should be abolished (1 + 3) • 6. Stability and security of work (1, 2 + 3) • 7. Equal opportunity and treatment in employment (1, 2 + 3) • 8. Safe work environment (1 + 3) • 9. Social security (1 + 3) • 10. Social dialogue, workers’ and employers’ representation (1 + 4) • 11. Economic and social context for decent work Note: (1) Rights at work (2) Employment opportunities (3) Social Protection (4) Social Dialogue
On the occasion of the World Statistics Day Celebration, the ILO Director General: “Better measuring progress in the realization of decent work is key to the realization of the Decent Work Agenda. We are placing high priority on enhancing the empirical basis of decent work policies and providing relevant and timely data that is being requested of us.” “The ILO is committed to constantly striving to improve its statistical capability to support national efforts. The mandate and capacity of the ILO Department of Statistics has been strengthened to meet this objective.” “A more comprehensive set of data is indispensable to better diagnose trends shaping the world of work and ultimately the lives of women and men, families and communities. We need the skilful data producers and the sharp analysts who can relate their statistical capability to the realities of the world of work and who can communicate effectively with policy makers and all who draw on their statistics to shape a world of decent work for all. Today, we celebrate “the service, the professionalism and the integrity” of official statistics in the world.” “The international statistical community will find in the ILO a committed ally in this journey.”
Thank you! http://www.ilo.org/stat/lang--en/index.htm