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World – Labour market to deteriorate further as Ukraine conflict and other crises continue: ILO

01 November 2022

The outlook for global labour markets has worsened in recent months and based on current trends, job vacancies will decline and global employment growth will deteriorate significantly in the final quarter of 2022, according to a new report from the International Labour Organisation (ILO).

The report highlighted that rising inflation is causing real wages to fall in many countries. This comes on top of significant declines in income during the Covid-19 crisis, which in many countries affected low-income groups most.

ILO’s report found that worsening labour market conditions are affecting both employment creation and the quality of jobs, pointing out that ‘there are already data suggesting a sharp labour market slowdown.’ Labour market inequalities are likely to increase, contributing to a continued divergence between developed and developing economies.

According to the Monitor, ‘a set of multiple and overlapping crises, compounded by the Ukraine war and subsequent negative spill over effects, have materialised over 2022 which are deeply impacting the world of work’. The effects are being felt through food and energy inflation, declining real wages, growing inequality, shrinking policy options and higher debt in developing countries. A slowdown in economic growth and aggregate demand will also reduce demand for workers as uncertainty and worsening expectations affect hiring.

ILO Director-General, Gilbert F. Houngbo said, “Tackling this deeply worrying global employment situation, and preventing a significant global labour market downturn, will require comprehensive, integrated and balanced policies both nationally and globally. We need the implementation of a broad set of policy tools, including interventions in the prices of public goods; the rechannelling of windfall profits; strengthening income security through social protection; increasing income support; and targeted measures to assist the most vulnerable people and enterprises.”

The war in Ukraine has had a dramatic negative impact on the country’s economy and labour market, the ILO noted. It estimates that employment in 2022 will be 15.5% (2.4 million jobs) below the 2021, pre-conflict, level. This projection is not as low as the ILO’s estimate in April 2022, soon after the conflict began, that 4.8 million jobs would be lost 

“We need a strong commitment to initiatives such as the UN Global Accelerator on Jobs and Social Protection , which would help countries create 400 million jobs and extend social protection to the four billion people who are currently unprotected,”Houngbo said. “And a rapid end to the conflict in Ukraine, as demanded in the resolutions of the ILO Governing Body, would further contribute to improving the global employment situation.”
At the beginning of 2022 the ILO noted that the number of global hours worked was recovering strongly, notably in higher-skilled occupations and among women. However, this was driven by an increase in informal jobs, jeopardising the 15-year trend towards formalisation. The situation worsened over the course of the year and in the third quarter of 2022 ILO estimates are that the level of hours worked was 1.5% below pre-pandemic levels, amounting to a deficit of 40 million full-time jobs.

The report calls for social dialogue to be used to create the policies necessary to counter the labour market downturn. These should not just react to inflation but focus on the broader implications for employment, enterprises, and poverty, it added.