Wcms 882219
Wcms 882219
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111/Report IA
Working
X Time
and Work-Life Balance
Around the World
International Labour Conference, 111th Session, 2023 ILC.111/I(A)(Rev.)
Report I(A)
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Preface
We face a disparate yet overlapping set of challenges, ranging from the fallout of the COVID-19
pandemic, the rising cost of living, extreme weather events and geopolitical instability to a looming
global debt crisis. Their effects on the world of work are significantly delaying, if not reversing, progress
towards social justice.
This report, my first to the International Labour Conference, sets out my vision for advancing
social justice and promoting decent work. It examines some of the stark realities facing the world of
work today – the persistent injustices, inequalities and insecurities – on which we must now act. It
considers the actions that will be required by the ILO and by governments and employers’ and workers’
organizations to address these realities through decent work. And it highlights the strategic
opportunities that exist, both nationally and internationally, for furthering our human-centred and
rights-based approach, including through integrated inter-agency action.
Our global ambition must be commensurate with the scale of the challenges we face. Harnessing
our unique tripartite convening power and guided by our enduring values, we need to forge a Global
Coalition with other key actors, including in the multilateral system, that works to advance social justice
and renew the social contract.
I encourage all delegates to consider and engage on my report. Your views and ideas will shape
that global ambition. Your knowledge and experience will be invaluable in determining the direction of
travel. And your unwavering commitment to our mandate of social justice will provide the momentum
we need to place this fundamental objective at the centre of all national and international policies.
Gilbert F. Houngbo
Director-General
Advancing social justice
5
Contents
Page
Preface ....................................................................................................................................................... 3
Chapter 1. The quest for social justice ................................................................................................ 7
What is social justice? ........................................................................................................................ 7
Advancing social justice through decent work .............................................................................. 10
Chapter 2. Has the world reached a critical juncture? ...................................................................... 13
Injustices persist ................................................................................................................................ 13
Labour market insecurity is widespread ........................................................................................ 14
Inequality high and rising ................................................................................................................. 15
Compounding crises .......................................................................................................................... 16
Social contracts unravelling ............................................................................................................. 17
Chapter 3. Advancing social justice, promoting decent work ......................................................... 19
Enhancing the inclusive and effective governance of work ........................................................ 20
Ensuring access to full, productive and freely chosen employment and
lifelong learning ................................................................................................................................. 22
Revitalizing labour market institutions for fair outcomes ........................................................... 24
Protecting people over the life cycle and making transitions equitable ................................... 25
Chapter 4. Forging a Global Coalition for Social Justice ................................................................... 27
Cultivating social justice through advocacy and policy dialogue ............................................... 27
Social justice as a cornerstone of a better coordinated multilateralism ................................... 28
International policy coordination for greater policy coherence ................................................. 29
Reinvigorated tripartism for a renewed social contract .............................................................. 30
Advancing social justice
7
Chapter 1
1
Gallup, “Gallup Global Life Evaluation Index”. The poll was carried out between April 2021 and January 2022.
2
Preamble to the ILO Constitution. This principle was also included in Part XIII of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919.
3
Declaration of Philadelphia, Part II(b) and (c).
4
Declaration of Philadelphia, Part II(a).
5
Declaration of Philadelphia, Part I(a). This principle was also included in Part XIII of the Treaty of Versailles as “labour should not
be regarded merely as a commodity or article of commerce”.
8 Advancing social justice
The quest for social justice
6. It is about fairness, equality and having a voice and the agency to shape one’s own life. It is about
having access to opportunities for employment and an adequate standard of living so that each
person can live a productive and dignified life. It is about shared prosperity and a measure of
security when income is interrupted, insufficient or intermittent. And while it may seem to go
without saying, it is about the rule of law and access to justice within a society.
7. Beyond being a moral imperative, social justice enables societies and economies to function more
cohesively and effectively. It unlocks the productive potential of countries and people and paves
the way for sustained reductions in poverty and inequality – prerequisites for inclusive growth. It
engenders peace, stability and intergenerational solidarity.
8. Social justice can be broadly described as having four dimensions. The first dimension is universal
human rights and capabilities. Universal human rights include, among others, access to an
adequate standard of living, education, healthcare and social security. They also include freedom
of association, which provides the foundations for democratic participation and social dialogue.
They are reflected in various instruments, including the United Nations (UN) Universal Declaration
of Human Rights of 1948, the UN International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights of 1966, and the ILO Declaration on
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (1998), as amended in 2022, as well as other
instruments. This dimension is primarily concerned with the expression of these universal rights
in international instruments – including international labour standards – and their
implementation in legislation, policies and institutions at the national level that ensure, for
example, effective access to public services on the one hand and the realization of enabling rights,
such as freedom of association, on the other.
9. Universal human rights can be seen as providing entitlements to certain basic capabilities. 6 The
capabilities approach – which has significantly influenced deliberations at the ILO on a human-
centred approach to the future of work and the understanding of human development within the
United Nations – considers capabilities and the substantive opportunities to make use of them a
necessary condition for advancing social justice. From this perspective, the indignities and misery
inflicted by poverty reflect not only a lack of income, but also a deprivation of capabilities, for
example, a deprivation of adequate nutrition, health care and quality education, necessary to
ensure human dignity and productive engagement in the economy and society.
10. The second dimension concerns equal access to opportunities for employment and productive
activity that enable people to pursue their material well-being in conditions of economic security.
It focuses on substantive opportunities to engage in economic activity and to be rewarded for
such effort, including the opportunity to attain meaningful work and to contribute to society. 7 It
is based on principles of “fair equality of opportunity” 8 and equal treatment. It is primarily
6
Capabilities are understood as people’s capabilities, or abilities, to do and to be those things that are deemed valuable. For
example, the freedom to be well nourished, to be in good health and immune from disease, and to be educated. The capability
approach shifts the focus in the assessment of human development and well-being from one of resources to what people are
able to “be and do” with these resources. See Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom (Oxford New York: Oxford University Press,
1999); and Martha C. Nussbaum, “Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of
Harvard University Press, 2011).
7
For a discussion of contributive justice, see Michael J. Sandel, Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? (Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
2009).
8
John Rawls in A Theory of Justice (Harvard University Press, 1971) advances two principles of justice as fairness: first, the guarantee
of equal basic freedoms for all; and second, fair equality of opportunity with the (lexically subordinate) “difference principle”
(p. 302). See also Alexander Kaufman, Rawls’s Egalitarianism (Cambridge University Press, 2018).
Advancing social justice
The quest for social justice 9
concerned with policies and measures that provide access to opportunities for productive and
freely chosen employment.
11. The third dimension encompasses the broader notion of fair distribution. It is concerned with
fairness in distributional outcomes including a just share of the benefits of economic growth, with
attention to the most disadvantaged or vulnerable in society. 9 Social justice is of course not only
about the right way to share the benefits of productivity gains; it is also about the right way to
recognize and value the work that sustains societies and supports the daily functioning of
economies – such as paid and unpaid care work. This dimension is primarily concerned with
institutions that address inequality and advance inclusion and shared prosperity, encompassing
both pre-distribution and redistribution policies. It includes the consideration of how power
imbalances might affect distributional outcomes and the institutions that offset these imbalances.
12. The fourth dimension concerns just transitions. This dimension captures the manner in which
significant transformations affect people’s well-being over time. This includes transformations
associated with globalization, technological, demographic, environmental and other
transformations, and compounding crises. It addresses the capabilities necessary to build
resilient societies and economies. It is reflected in the ILO Centenary Declaration for the Future of
Work (Centenary Declaration), adopted by the International Labour Conference in 2019, with its
focus on a human-centred approach to the transformations under way in the world of work. 10
This dimension is primarily concerned with the policies and measures that maximize
opportunities and mitigate risks, enabling people to navigate the transitions that these
transformations and compounding crises imply.
13. These four dimensions are interrelated and interdependent (figure 1). Societies manifest them in
the way in which they govern themselves, particularly in the choices they make in related areas of
policy design and implementation. Such choices give expression to the implicit social contract of
any society. 11
9
The Declaration of Philadelphia refers to policies that will ensure “a just share of the fruits of progress to all, and a minimum
living wage to all employed and in need of such protection”. See also John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Harvard University Press,
1971) for an account of the difference principle, according to which inequalities are to be arranged so that they are “to the greatest
benefit of the least advantaged”.
10
It is also reflected in the recognition by the UN General Assembly of the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment
as a universal human right. See UN General Assembly, resolution 76/300, The human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable
environment, A/RES/76/300 (2022).
11
While it varies across countries and over time, a social contract can be understood as an implicit arrangement that defines the
relationship between the government and citizens and between different groups of the population. It reflects a common
understanding about how a society is organized; the norms and rules that govern how collective institutions operate and how
resources are distributed (including the determination of public goods); the individual and collective responsibilities in that regard;
and the policies that are designed to achieve social justice. See ILO, Social contract and the future of work, Issue Note No. 4, The
Future of Work Centenary Initiative, 2016.
10 Advancing social justice
The quest for social justice
Universal
Equal access
human rights
to
and
opportunities
capabilities
Just Fair
transitions distribution
in the fruits of progress and help people navigate the transitions they will face throughout their
working lives. The priorities in this regard are addressed in Chapter 3.
Fundamental
principles and
rights at work
Universal
Equal access
human
to
rights and Full,
Social opportunities
capabilities productive
dialogue
and freely
and
chosen
tripartism Just Fair employment
transitions distribution
Social protection
and
labour protection
17. At the same time, causal links exist between decent work and other aspects of human
development reflected in the various dimensions of social justice. For example, effective access to
healthcare services and to quality education improves capabilities to access employment and
releases the productive potential of countries, while access to decent work enhances the
likelihood that workers and their families will have adequate nutrition, enjoy good health and
obtain quality education.
18. Reinforcing the links between decent work and other aspects of human development has the
potential to engender a positive and sustainable development trajectory through improved levels
of education, a well-nourished and healthy population and workforce, better skills and
productivity and increased levels of income. An adequate living wage and social protection can
significantly improve the financial resources available to low-income households, thereby
reducing their possible reliance on contributing family members that are still children.
Accordingly, these children are able to continue their education, improving their own prospects
and those of future generations. This in turn reduces the inhibiting effects of inequality on
intergenerational mobility.
19. By the same token, a failure to advance social justice in respect of an adequate standard of living,
access to effective healthcare and a quality education undermines progress towards decent work.
For example, over 244 million children and young people across the world are still out of school,
and it is estimated that seven out of ten children in low- and middle-income countries cannot read
12 Advancing social justice
The quest for social justice
and understand a simple story at the age of ten. 12 These deprivations in access to quality
education mean that many millions of children are at work and could soon be joined by millions
more. They impair the future opportunities of these children to access decent employment and a
standard of living adequate for their own health and well-being and for that of their families – to
say nothing of protection against risks over their lifetimes. These failures represent more than
individual ”deficits in human capital”; they represent a crisis that constrains productive potential
and the capacity of countries to advance and secure decent work.
20. The ILO has long understood that the pursuit of social justice in respect of an adequate standard
of living, effective access to healthcare and quality education is essential for the realization of its
own mandate. 13 In a similar vein, it is not possible to achieve sustainable development without
decent work. This is our common agenda.
12
United Nations, Report on the 2022 Transforming Education Summit, January 2023.
13
See Philadelphia Declaration, Part III. See also the Centenary Declaration, which calls on the ILO to further develop its human-
centred approach to the future of work through effective lifelong learning and quality education for all (Part III(A)(ii)).
Advancing social justice
13
Chapter 2
Injustices persist
22. At the end of 2022, 685 million people were estimated to be living in extreme poverty, the majority
of whom were in sub-Saharan Africa and in fragile and conflict-affected economies. 16 These
people are unable to secure sufficient resources to meet their basic needs for safe drinking water,
food and sanitation, health and shelter. Such deprivation is an affront to human dignity. It is often
interrelated with other injustices, including child and forced labour. Global estimates indicate that
160 million children were engaged in child labour in 2020, while close to 50 million people were
living in modern slavery in 2021. 17 The increases since 2016 in the absolute number of people in
child labour by over 8 million and modern slavery by 2.7 million are the antithesis of social justice.
23. Linked to these injustices is the fact that millions of people engage in unsafe or unhealthy work
each day in order to earn a living. An estimated 2 million workers die as a result of occupational
accidents and diseases each year, and hundreds of millions of workers are injured at work. 18 The
resulting human tragedy combined with the loss of economic output and productivity constitute
multiple layers of injustice.
24. Regrettably, most intra-state conflicts are linked to exclusion and discrimination involving
minorities. 19 Furthermore, globally, more than one in five persons in employment have
14
Global extreme poverty declined from nearly 35 per cent in 1995 to less than 10 per cent in 2019. World Bank, Poverty and Shared
Prosperity 2022: Correcting Course, 2022. Global literacy rates have increased steadily, from 68 per cent in 1979 to 86 per cent in
2016. UNESCO, “What you need to know about literacy”.
15
The top 1 per cent of the wealth distribution has taken 38 per cent of all wealth accumulated since the mid-1990s, whereas the
bottom 50 per cent has gained only 2 per cent of it. Lucas Chancel et al., World Inequality Report 2022 (World Inequality Lab, 2022).
See also ILO, Inequalities and the world of work, ILC.109/IV(Rev.), 2021.
16
World Bank, Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2022.
17
ILO and UNICEF, Child Labour: Global Estimates 2020, Trends and the Road Forward, 2021; ILO, Walk Free and IOM, Global Estimates
of Modern Slavery: Forced Labour and Forced Marriage, 2022.
18
WHO and ILO, WHO/ILO Joint Estimates of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury, 2000–2016: Global Monitoring Report, 2021.
This estimate is based on fatalities related to exposure to 19 occupational risk factors.
19
UN General Assembly, Conflict prevention through the protection of the human rights of minorities: Report of the Special Rapporteur
on minority issues, Fernand de Varennes, A/HRC/49/46, 2022.
14 Advancing social justice
Has the world reached a critical juncture?
experienced violence and harassment at work, whether physical, psychological or sexual, during
their working life. For the majority of these victims, this is a recurrent experience. 20 Young women
are twice as likely as young men to have faced sexual violence and harassment at work, and
migrant women are almost twice as likely as non-migrant women to report sexual violence and
harassment.
20
At the global level, 61.4 per cent of victims said in a recent survey that they had experienced violence and harassment more
than three times during their working lives. ILO, Lloyd’s Register Foundation and Gallup, Experiences of violence and harassment at
work: A global first survey, 2022.
21
ILO, World Employment and Social Outlook: Trends 2023, 2023.
22
ILO, Women and men in the informal economy: A statistical update, 2023.
23
OECD and ILO, Tackling Vulnerability in the Informal Economy, 2019.
24
ILO, Working Time and Work-Life Balance Around the World, 2022.
25
ILO, World Employment and Social Outlook: Trends 2020, 2020.
26
Lucas Chancel, Philipp Bothe and Tancrède Voituriez, Climate Inequality Report 2023 (World Inequality Lab, 2023/1).
Advancing social justice
Has the world reached a critical juncture? 15
29. This heightened economic insecurity is compounded by policy agendas that have left more than
4 billion people excluded from any form of social protection. They have no access to healthcare
and sickness benefits, no support that might assist them to feed, clothe and care for their children,
and no access to income in their old age, during periods of unemployment or in the event of the
death of the main income earner. 27
30. While the level of social protection coverage varies by country and region, four groups
consistently figure among the most excluded and vulnerable: workers in the informal economy;
migrant workers, including those forcibly displaced; young people; and women. Among workers
in the informal economy, most are neither affiliated with contributory schemes, nor included by
narrowly targeted social assistance schemes, which deem them “too rich’’ (or “not poor enough”)
to qualify – and they therefore fall into the so-called ‘‘missing middle’’.
27
ILO, World Social Protection Report 2020–22: Social protection at the crossroads – in pursuit of a better future, 2021.
28
ILO, Inequalities and the world of work, ILC.109/IV(Rev.), 2021.
29
ILO, Spotlight on Work Statistics No. 12: New data shed light on gender gaps in the labour market, ILO Brief, March 2023. The jobs
gap differs from the unemployment gap. To be unemployed, a person must be seeking work and available to take up a job at very
short notice, typically one week. These criteria are less likely to include women who, while wishing to work, may not be
immediately available due to their disproportional responsibility for unpaid care work.
30
ILO, Global Wage Report 2018/19: What lies behind gender pay gaps, 2018.
31
Brett O’Hara, “Twice Penalized: Employment Discrimination Against Women with Disabilities,” Journal of Disability Policy Studies
15, No. 1 (2004): 27–34.
32
Silas Amo-Agyei, The migrant pay gap: Understanding wage differences between migrants and nationals, (ILO, 2020).
16 Advancing social justice
Has the world reached a critical juncture?
private solutions, the supply of which has expanded exponentially, with the public provision
lagging behind. As a result, those who can afford private services are often less willing to pay the
taxes necessary to ensure the provision of public services and other public goods. This creates a
dual system which reinforces inequality. In the case of healthcare services, dominant private-
sector provision, without adequate regulation and appropriate social health protection, often
goes hand-in-hand with high out-of-pocket expenditure on health, which is the case in many low
and middle-income countries. 33
Compounding crises
35. These injustices, insecurities and inequalities are exacerbated by multiple and overlapping crises
– a pandemic, a dramatic fall in aggregate demand, rising prices, extreme weather events and
geopolitical instability, including the Russian Federation’s aggression against Ukraine. The
interaction of these disparate shocks has resulted in a “polycrisis” with compounding effects that
are far worse than the sum of each shock.
36. The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the loss of hundreds of millions of jobs and induced the
largest increase in global poverty since 1990 – and arguably since the Second World War. 34 It had
disproportionate effects on the most vulnerable in labour markets, including women and young
people, 35 and hit small enterprises the hardest. 36 The current cost-of-living crisis has further
eroded the purchasing power of already disadvantaged low-income households, who spend a
larger share of their income on basic items, such as food, utilities and housing. 37 And at the
extreme of human suffering, acute food insecurity continues to escalate. As of January 2023,
around 45 million people in 37 countries are projected to have so little to eat that they will be
severely malnourished, at risk of death or already facing starvation. 38
37. More than three years since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic, the
labour market situation remains dire. The global jobs gap, which reflects the unmet need for
employment, stood at 473 million people in 2022, corresponding to a jobs gap rate of 12.3 per
cent. 39 In addition, previous gains in the formalization of employment have reversed course. 40
38. Economic uncertainty is dampening business investment and delaying processes of structural
transformation and development that would otherwise be fundamental to ensure a sustained and
inclusive recovery. Meanwhile, the expiry of the G20 Debt Service Suspension Initiative at the end
of 2021, together with rising variable interest rates, has led to significant increases in debt service,
undermining the capacity of many governments to invest in and deliver basic public services.
33
ILO, World Social Protection Report 2020–22: Social protection at the crossroads – in pursuit of a better future.
34
World Bank, Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2022; ILO, ILO Monitor: COVID-19 and the world of work, Second edition: Updated
estimates and analysis, April 2020.
35
ILO, An uneven and gender-unequal COVID-19 recovery: Update on gender and employment trends 2021, ILO Brief, October 2021;
ILO, Global Employment Trends for Youth 2022: Investing in transforming futures for young people, 2022.
36
World Bank, “Unmasking the impact of COVID-19 on business”, Policy Research Working Paper No. 9434, 2020.
37
ILO, Global Wage Report 2022–23: The impact of inflation and COVID-19 on wages and purchasing power, 2022.
38
FAO and WFP, Hunger Hotspots: FAO– WFP early warnings on acute food insecurity, October 2022 to January 2022 Outlook, 2023.
39
The global jobs gap of 473 million in 2022 consists of 205 million unemployed as well as 268 million people who have an unmet
need for employment but do not satisfy the criteria to be considered unemployed. ILO, World Economic and Social Outlook: Trends
2023, 2023.
40
ILO, ILO Monitor on the world of work. Tenth edition: Multiple crises threaten the global labour market recovery, 31 October 2022.
Advancing social justice
Has the world reached a critical juncture? 17
Some 54 countries remain in, or are at a high risk of, debt distress, a recipe for defaults and
prolonged socio-economic hardship. 41
Lars Jensen, “Avoiding ‘Too Little Too Late’ on International Debt Relief,” Development Futures Series Working Paper,
41
UNDP, 2022.
42
UN, Our Common Agenda: Report of the Secretary-General, 2021.
Advancing social justice
19
Chapter 3
Enhancing Ensuring
the inclusive access to full,
and effective productive
governance Fundamental and freely
of work principles and chosen
rights at work employment
and lifelong
learning
Universal
Equal access
human
to Full,
Social rights and
opportunities productive
dialogue capabilities
and freely
and
chosen
tripartism
Just Fair employment
transitions distribution
Protecting Revitalizing
people over Social protection labour
the life cycle and market
and making labour protection institutions
transitions for fair
equitable outcomes
43
Centenary Declaration, Part I(D).
20 Advancing social justice
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work?
44
Centenary Declaration, Part III(B).
45
See Centenary Declaration, Part III(C)(v).
46
In the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work (1998), as amended in 2022, the Conference declares that
“all Members, even if they have not ratified the Conventions in question, have an obligation, arising from the very fact of
membership in the Organization, to respect, to promote and to realize, in good faith and in accordance with the Constitution, the
principles concerning the fundamental rights which are the subject of those Conventions” (paragraph 2).
Advancing social justice
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work 21
work. The realization of these enabling rights provides the essential procedural capabilities with
which to advance social justice. It establishes the necessary conditions for the effective
functioning of tripartite and bipartite models of governance and for social dialogue. There is a
need to ensure the effective realization of these fundamental workers’ rights in law and practice.
53. Based on these foundations, governments and employers’ and workers’ organizations can engage
in processes of social dialogue on policies, shape joint solutions and build trust. Inclusive and
effective social dialogue provides the institutional capacity to forge inclusive development paths
with fair opportunities for all, to secure just transitions and to tackle future challenges. And as the
experience of the COVID-19 pandemic has shown, it can provide an essential source of resilience.
54. Clearly, technological innovations in the organization of work and production need to be matched
with innovations in the governance of that work. The aspiration for social justice, dignity and
economic security is a universal one, whether that work is performed through a digital platform
or on a production line. The ILO has affirmed the continued relevance of the employment
relationship in providing labour protection. 47 Governments, in consultation with employers’ and
workers’ organizations, need to clarify and where necessary adapt the scope of laws and
regulations to guarantee effective protection to workers who perform work in the context of an
employment relationship. 48 Consideration must also be given to measures that ensure adequate
protection for workers that fall outside of this scope, but are in need of such protection.
55. Particular attention should be given to forging pathways to formality and social justice for the
millions in the informal economy that are either excluded from the scope of laws and regulations
or are legally covered but rendered unprotected in practice due to non-compliance – as is the case
with undeclared work. For workers, this must entail the effective recognition of their fundamental
principles and rights at work and other protections that have been afforded to them. Enterprises
for their part need an enabling environment that encourages the sustainability of their
operations, provides conditions for formalization and secures their compliance with laws and
regulations.
56. Labour administration plays a central role in the governance of work. While the way in which it
operates may vary across countries, labour administration has a vital role to play in influencing
the direction of policy, providing the conditions that support the transition from the informal to
the formal economy and securing compliance with workers’ rights. There is a need to ensure that
labour administration has the requisite political support and the administrative capacity to carry
out its governance functions, including those of a tripartite nature. Its agency is critical in
developing effective regulatory frameworks and securing the fiscal space necessary for pro-
employment budgeting and the expansion of social protection.
57. Beyond the ILO’s own means of action, there are opportunities to harness synergies that exist
between the Decent Work Agenda and international investment and trading arrangements. If
designed correctly, these instruments – some binding, some voluntary – can enhance the impact
of the ILO’s normative framework, particularly with regard to universal respect for fundamental
principles and rights at work, while also boosting sustainable economic growth. There is much
scope to leverage these opportunities through greater policy coordination. 49 The ILO’s priority
47
Centenary Declaration, Part III(B).
48
In accordance with the guidance provided in the Employment Relationship Recommendation, 2006 (No. 198).
For example, in March 2023, the ILO adopted a strategy to advance decent work in supply chains. See ILO, ILO strategy on decent
49
action programme on decent work outcomes in supply chains will significantly advance work in
this regard.
50
ILO, Achieving a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all, ILC.111/VI, 2023.
51
ILO, Guidelines for a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all, 2015.
Advancing social justice
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work 23
access to care services, generating good quality employment with access to social protection,
particularly for young people, while at the same time removing the barriers faced by women
entering and remaining in the labour market. 52 Efforts to enhance access to opportunities for
vulnerable groups in this growth sector need to be accompanied by measures that ensure that
that these are actually decent work opportunities.
64. There is also a need to ensure that employment policies are gender responsive. This means
embedding gender equality concerns in fiscal and monetary policies by, for example, ensuring
that tax systems do not penalize secondary earners (typically the female partner) by considering
individual taxation. Other measures are necessary to ensure women’s access to productive
resources such as land and credit. These are particularly relevant in the agricultural sector, but
they are also important for the millions of self-employed workers and in the context of micro and
small enterprises run by women. They should be linked, where relevant, to business development
services.
65. In addition to calling for the creation of opportunities for full, productive and freely chosen
employment, the Centenary Declaration calls for a strengthening of the capacities of all people so
that they can benefit from such opportunities.
66. The quality of any country’s education and training system is central to ensuring equal access to
opportunities for employment and facilitating just transitions. 53 This includes quality early
childhood care and education. Access to apprenticeships and technical and vocational education
and training play a key role in facilitating school-to-work transitions and the inclusion of young
people in labour markets. This is another area where the involvement of the social partners and
cooperation with other relevant stakeholders is critical for the development of effective and
equitable education and lifelong learning systems.
67. Furthermore, effective measures are needed to support people through the transitions they face
over their working lives – from school to work, unemployment to employment, job to job and work
to retirement. 54 Such support calls for simultaneous investments in skills strategies, lifelong
learning, employment services and active labour market policies, as well as social protection
policies, and includes job search assistance, career guidance, employment subsidies and public
employment programmes, training and entrepreneurship incentives.
68. One of the most transformational processes is the transition from the informal to the formal
economy, as has been argued above. Such formalization is a necessary condition to reduce
poverty and inequalities, while simultaneously increasing the productivity and sustainability of
enterprises and enhancing government’s scope of action through available tax revenue. While
informality has a myriad of interrelated causes, including those stemming from the regulatory
framework and access to land and credit, among these is simply an insufficiency in the capability
of economies to generate quality jobs in the formal economy. There is a need to accelerate action
by increasing the availability of opportunities for decent employment with access to social
protection for the millions of workers in the informal economy, while at the same time improving
the skills and productive capacities of people and enterprises to enter the formal economy. The
52
ILO, Global Employment Trends for Youth 2022: Investing in transforming futures for young people; ILO and UN Women, “A Guide to
Public Investments in the Care Economy”, Policy Tool, 2021.
53
Centenary Declaration, Part III(A)(ii).
54
Centenary Declaration, Part III(A)(iv).
24 Advancing social justice
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work?
ILO’s priority action programme on transitions from the informal to the formal economy will
advance such an integrated approach. 55
69. Social injustices are often both the cause and outcome of fragility and conflict. In fragile and
conflict settings, employment policies can play an important role in connecting short-term
humanitarian needs to longer-term development objectives, while addressing the root causes of
social injustice, including inequalities and social exclusion. 56 The ILO’s priority action programme
on decent work for crisis response will advance the ILO’s agenda on this critical issue.
70. Finally, the types of integrated approaches that will be required to ensure access to freely chosen
employment and just transitions, including macroeconomic policies and those targeting care,
green and digital economies, require better coordination at the national and international levels
and stronger links to social protection policies and financing, as envisaged in the Global
Accelerator on Jobs and Social Protection for Just Transitions. This is a crucial area where the ILO
needs to reinforce its leadership within the multilateral system, leveraging its strong convening
power.
55
In line with the Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy Recommendation, 2015 (No. 204).
56
ILO, Employment and decent work in the Humanitarian–Development–Peace Nexus, 2021.
57
ILO, Comprehensive and integrated ILO strategy to reduce and prevent inequalities in the world of work, GB.346/INS/5, 2022.
58
ILO, Leaving no one behind: Building inclusive labour protection in an evolving world of work, ILC.111/V, 2023.
59
See ILO, Global Wage Report 2022–23: The impact of inflation and COVID-19 on wages and purchasing power.
Advancing social justice
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work 25
transportation supply chains. 60 Attention also needs to be given to the situation of workers who
are self-employed and do not earn a wage per se.
75. One institution that continues to play a role in delivering outcomes that are fair, equitable and
inclusive is collective bargaining. The evidence is clear: wage inequality, including the gender pay
gap, is lower in countries where a greater proportion of workers have their wages set by collective
agreements. 61 Collective agreements are also instrumental in establishing equal pay and equal
treatment. Yet, according to ILO estimates, only one third of all employees have their terms and
conditions of employment set by a collective agreement. There is a need to step up efforts to
promote collective bargaining.
76. While much progress has been made in advancing a transformative agenda for gender equality,
gender pay gaps persist and women’s work in feminized occupations and sectors continues to be
undervalued and underpaid. Ongoing efforts are needed to advance equal pay legislation and
implement job evaluation and pay transparency measures. In addition, increased investment in
care policies is essential to ensure that women do not shoulder the disproportionate burden of
unpaid care work and the associated wage penalties that are compounded over the course of
their working lives. These include care services, care-related social protection policies and
parental leave policies. 62
77. Linked to the issue of care policies is the way in which societies and labour markets value keywork.
The pandemic put a spotlight on the systematic undervaluing of workers who deliver essential
services. These key workers earn wages that are 26 per cent lower on average relative to other
employees performing work of similar value. There is a need to revalue their work to reflect their
social contribution, including through the revitalization of wage policies. 63
78. The question remains as to how investment in critical public services will be secured – from
essential services in general to care services in particular. Clearly, the returns in terms of the
productive potential of countries, the assets created and the capacity to withstand, adapt to and
transform in the face of crises are there for the taking. But it will require a broad global coalition
and partners ready to advance this agenda.
Protecting people over the life cycle and making transitions equitable
79. Social protection is a human right. It provides access to an adequate standard of living and the
capabilities necessary for people to realize their full potential. Together with the provision of
public services, social security systems are critical instruments for effective redistribution through
transfers and taxes, achieving more equitable outcomes than would otherwise be provided by the
market and distributive policies alone. And last but not least, social protection is critical for
enhancing the resilience of people, societies and economies, making transitions more equitable
and sustainable.
80. Universal access to comprehensive and sustainable social protection would enable people to take
advantage of the opportunities that lie ahead. Inclusive social insurance schemes or tax-financed
60
ILO, Setting adequate wages: The question of living wages, ILO Brief, October 2022. There is no standard or agreed methodology
for setting adequate wages. The ILO continues to conduct research on this issue.
ILO, Social Dialogue Report 2022: Collective bargaining for an inclusive, sustainable and resilient economy, 2022. OECD, Negotiating
61
schemes, or a combination of both, provide for portability, broad risk-sharing, and the sustainable
and equitable financing of social protection systems.
81. And yet, as noted in Chapter 2, more than 4 billion people around the world lack access to any
form of social protection. The COVID-19 pandemic revealed, in stark terms, the disconnect that
exists between the vision of universal social protection, where everyone has access to
comprehensive, adequate and sustainable protection over the life cycle, and the reality. Many
countries are not able to provide access to healthcare, sickness and unemployment benefits,
which took on particular relevance during the pandemic.
82. This underscores the exigency of investing in social protection systems, and especially in social
protection floors that can guarantee at least a basic level of income security and access to
healthcare for all. Unfortunately, the level of social protection expenditure worldwide remains
insufficient to guarantee national social protection floors, let alone provide progressively higher
levels of protection to as many people as possible in line with ILO standards.
83. There are diverse options for expanding fiscal space and closing the financing gap for social
protection, including increasing national revenue from taxes and social security contributions,
with due consideration of the links with employment and sectoral policies. These national efforts
need to be grounded in greater international cooperation on taxation and on accommodating
macroeconomic frameworks. This includes cooperation with the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) to secure fiscal space for social spending.
84. And while domestic resource mobilization must remain the cornerstone of national social
protection systems, for developing countries stronger international solidarity and policy
coordination is key. For countries with unsustainable levels of external debt, it is critical to find
workable solutions for internationally agreed debt restructuring so that they are not compelled
to service their debt when they could be investing their limited resources in guaranteeing basic
social protection and an adequate standard of living.
85. The international community also needs to consider other ways to help bridge the financing gap
for social protection in low-income countries, including through largely unmet official
development assistance commitments, increased concessional lending and budget support, or a
new international financing mechanism to complement and support domestic resource
mobilization efforts. 64 This will require a broader effort than that which the ILO alone can
advance.
86. The Centenary Declaration requires the ILO to take forward its constitutional mandate and
reinforce cooperation within the multilateral system and with other international organizations.
64
ILO, Conclusions concerning the second recurrent discussion on social protection (social security), International Labour
Conference, 109th Session, 2021, para. 21(c).
Advancing social justice
27
Chapter 4
65
ILO, The ILO Monitor on the World of Work: 11th edition, 2023, forthcoming.
66
Estimates based on Fabio Durán-Valverde et al., Financing gaps in social protection: Global estimates and strategies for developing
countries in light of the COVID-19 crisis and beyond, ILO Working Paper, 2020.
28 Advancing social justice
Forging a Global Coalition for Social Justice
social justice in policymaking and decision-making at all levels, based on social dialogue, and the
need for increased investment in that regard.
92. Building on the ILO’s experience of mobilizing tripartism to advance social justice, the Global
Coalition would support the ILO constituents in identifying social justice deficits and design
strategies to address these effectively and sustainably through processes of national social
dialogue. 67 These actors have a critical role to play – through social dialogue – in shaping public
policies that determine, for example, the quality of public services, which in turn has implications
for the world of work.
93. The Global Coalition’s advocacy and policy dialogue would be supported by an authoritative
knowledge base. A recurrent report would provide an up-to-date picture of the state of social
justice in the world. It would focus on pertinent themes and place a spotlight on particularly
innovative and transformative policy approaches to advancing human rights and capabilities,
securing equal access to opportunities for employment and productive activity, ensuring fair
distribution and facilitating just transitions.
This approach will be informed by the comprehensive and integrated ILO strategy to reduce and prevent inequalities in the
67
world of work. See ILO, Comprehensive and integrated ILO strategy to reduce and prevent inequalities in the world of work,
GB.346/INS/5, 2022.
See also Economic and Social Council, Resolution 2007/2, The role of the United Nations system in providing full and productive
68
demonstrating the case for policy integration and international policy coherence, while building
momentum and support for essential social investments.
98. Other frameworks for action include: the Equal Pay International Coalition; the Global Alliance for
Care; the Coalition of Action on Decent Work and Living Incomes and Wages for All Food Systems
Workers, which arose from the Food Systems Summit in 2021; and the Climate Action for Jobs
initiative. The newly established High-level Panel on the Teaching Profession that emerged from
the Transforming Education Summit in 2022 is another important opportunity to carry forward
integrated actions.
99. These initiatives provide practical modalities for advancing social justice and strengthening
support for countries seeking to accelerate progress. They demonstrate – in concrete terms – the
synergies arising from integrated inter-agency action within a shared framework and the benefits
of better coordinated multilateralism.
100. In the build-up to the Summit of the Future in 2024, the Global Coalition could serve as a platform
for showcasing these modalities for multilateral cooperation and coordination, including how
they might contribute to the achievement of the proposals that emerge from the SDG Summit in
September 2023.
101. Our global ambition must be commensurate with the scale of the challenges we face. Together
we must build a Coalition that will serve as a leading political platform for accelerating progress
on social justice in the run-up to the World Social Summit that the UN Secretary-General has
proposed for 2025, and one that can firmly embed the imperative for social justice in any follow-
up plan of action.
69
Article I of the Articles of Agreement of the International Monetary Fund sets out the purposes of the IMF, which include “to
facilitate the expansion and balanced growth of international trade, and to contribute thereby to the promotion and maintenance
of high levels of employment and real income [….] as primary objectives of economic policy”. The goals of the World Bank are to
end extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity in a sustainable way. In its Preamble, the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing
the World Trade Organization recognizes that trade should be conducted with a view to raising standards of living, ensuring full
employment and a large and steadily growing volume of real income and effective demand, and expanding the production of and
trade in goods and services while allowing for the optimal use of the world’s resources.
30 Advancing social justice
Forging a Global Coalition for Social Justice
institution can better fulfil its mandate and ultimately assist its beneficiaries, namely
governments, employers’ and workers’ organizations, people and enterprises in the countries
concerned. It could serve to enhance cooperation and coordination for greater policy coherence
at the international and national levels. This might include:
(a) closer engagement on social safeguards in investment and development projects;
(b) joint work to identify options for expanding fiscal space for full employment and the
establishment of a social protection floor, building on the ILO–IMF pilots 70 conducted
between 2021 and 2023 and extending this collaboration to more countries;
(c) dialogue with the ILO’s tripartite constituents on socially sustainable frameworks for debt
restructuring;
(d) joint work between the ILO and the World Bank at the country level to establish rights-based
universal social protection systems, building on the Global Partnership for Universal Social
Protection to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (USP2030); and
(e) possible engagement with the World Bank and the IMF on an anti-crisis framework to ensure
that, in times of crisis, institutional programmes fully integrate the social dimension,
safeguarding jobs and guaranteeing a social protection floor to ensure a more inclusive,
sustainable and resilient recovery. The COVID-19 crisis showed that this is possible, but it is
necessary to ensure that it is also a reality for debt-stressed countries and those with limited
fiscal space.
106. Similarly, the Global Coalition could enhance the ILO’s efficacy through joint research and
cooperation with the WTO, considering the social dimension of supply chains in ways that better
integrate trade and decent work and facilitate just transitions. The Global Coalition could provide
a political platform for efforts to increase support for domestic investment in the institutions of
decent work in conjunction with trade and investment and to engage in dialogue on the policies
and institutions necessary to take advantage of opportunities and mitigate potential costs.
Two of the pilot countries were programme cases and the other two were surveillance countries. The countries were Iraq,
70
110. There is an urgent need to reinvigorate tripartism and renew commitments to social dialogue, so
that choices on policy design and implementation, on investments in capabilities and on public
services and their financing give primacy to social justice. Employers’ and workers’ organizations
will need the requisite recognition and support to enable them to render significant contributions
and provide shared solutions. They are the conduits for renewing the social contract through their
engagement in social dialogue with governments.
111. We stand at a critical juncture. Poverty anywhere remains a threat to prosperity everywhere. In a
time of transformative change in the world of work, the ILO has agreed to carry forward “with
unrelenting vigour” its constitutional mandate for social justice. 71 We have adopted strategies to
guide our actions. And we have the institutional means to forge consensus, accelerate these
actions and fulfil our mandate, including through the deepened engagement of other critical
actors as envisaged by the ILO Constitution. Now is the time to build a Global Coalition for Social
Justice.
71
Centenary Declaration, Part I(D).