Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Employment for Women and Youth: Challenges and Solutions AU Pre-Event on Ouaga + 10 Country Club, Windhoek, Namibia 22 April 2014 Michael Mwasikakata Employment Policy Specialist ILO DWT Pretoria STRUCTURE OF PRESENTATION Youth and Women Employment: Situation Analysis Binding Constraints to Creation of Productive and Decent Employment for Women and Youth Proposed strategies for promoting youth and women employment Conclusions Youth and Women Employment Trends • Globally, youth unemployment continues to rise, reaching 74.5million in 2013, or 13.1%, almost three times the adult rate. In North Africa: 29%; SSA: 11.9% (GET 2014) • The NEET are on the rise, in some countries reaching a quarter of the 1529 youth • In Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) young people (15-24 years) are twice as likely to be unemployed as adults. In North Africa almost 3.5 times. The youth are not a homogeneous group, young women are more likely to be unemployed than young men: by 0.7 percentage points globally in 2013, 19.8 and 1.6 in N.Afr and SSA, respectively. Situation likely to worsen Labour absorption rates for women trail behind men: Gaps in employment to population ratios for women across the globe not significantly improving, if not worsening • Middle East and North Africa are hardest hit and situation expected to remain constant to 2018 Youth and Women Employment Trends STWS results (from SSA) • 40% of young people aged 15-29 are in school • Unemployment tend to increase with education-queuing for public sector jobs • However the more educated have better wages and stable jobs • Most youths are in precarious employment (70% self-employed), only 25% of the remaining 30% are in standard employment relationships • Informal employment is standard condition for the youth in the survey countries • Youth labour underutilization is as high as 70% • High skills mismatch – 53% under qualified for their jobs • Agriculture and services are the main sectors for the youth, industry underdeveloped in many countries • Less than 10% of the youth use standard job-search methods, most rely on friends and relatives Women face the brunt across the board • According to GET 2012 for Women, there are serious gender gaps with regard to labour force participation rates, employment absorption, unemployment, sectoral and occupational distribution with women being concentrated in agriculture and services and low paying and status occupations, and vulnerability • The school to work transition surveys (STWS) undertaken in a sample SSA countries in 2013/14 confirm the gender inequalities among the youth • Gender gaps in labour supply worsening :Women (youth and adult) are more likely to be outside the labour force in noneconomic care economy than men • The lower gaps in SSA reflect more the high level of poverty than gender equality as women have to fend for their families • Young women predominantly in elementary occupations, mostly own-account and family workers, more likely to be self-employed, in irregular employment, earn less. • All is not lost however, situation is improving, gender gaps in sectoral distribution are tending towards zero in agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa The youth are highly affected by HIV and AIDS pandemic • The revealed high rates of precarious employment and working poverty among young people makes young people particularly vulnerable to HIV. • Young PLWHIV find it hard to access employment, even though they have the necessary competencies and skills. They are often denied employment if they are found to be HIV+ • SSA, young people aged 15-24 accounted for 39% of the 2 million new HIV infections registered in 2012. High rate of new infections has serious implications for enterprise productivity today as well as for the workforce of tomorrow. • Knowledge about HIV prevention among young people remains low (36% for young men and 28% for young women). Young women and girls account for 68% of all young people living with HIV. • Young people often have less access to high quality HIV prevention, treatment and care than their adult counterparts. Binding Constraints to Youth and Women Decent Employment • Low labour absportion capacity of economies due to low/inadequate growth, pattern of growth and low labour intensity • Poor and inconsistent macroeconomic, sectoral and labour market policies • Low and mismatched qualifications and skills, low capabilities • Poor and unequal access to financing, entrepreneurship and business development services • Inadequate coverage and application of social protection and rights at work laws and policies • Inequality and HIV/AIDS effects at the household and workplace levels Policies to promote productive and decent employment for youth and women Stimulate demand and create jobs for youth and women through pro-employment macroeconomic policies Invest in education and training to enhance employability, capabilities and facilitate the school-to-work transition Improve labour market integration of young people and women through targeted labour market policies Provide career options to young people and women by supporting entrepreneurship and self-employment Ensure that young people and women receive equal treatment and are afforded rights at work Address root causes of discrimination and inequality from the household to workplace level: youth and women empowerment Concerted efforts by governments, employers and workers organizations to combat HIV/AIDS at the workplace Policies for youth and women employment Instruments for policy-making • Policy measures should be balanced and adapted to countryspecific needs Multi-pronged and balanced strategies for growth and job creation Apprenticeships, skills training and other work-training programmes Targeted youth & women employment action through tripartite consensus and time-bound action plans Employment services Comprehensive packages of labour market measures targeting specific groups of women & young people Platforms for exchanging knowledge and lessons of what works Policiy measures Multiple services for entrepreneurship, social enterprises and cooperatives development Bipartite and tripartite cooperation Pro-employment macroeconomic policies to support job growth • Ouaga 2004 committed to place employment as one of the central objectives of economic and social policies • In 2007 at the 11th African Regional Meeting of the ILO member states committed to the decent work agenda and to targeting employment as one of central objectives of macroeconomic policy • While some member states have mainstreamed employment in their national development policies, inconsistencies still remain in that the focus of macroeconomic policy still remains on stability- the single mandate • This is reinforced by the regional economic blocks’s macroeconomic convergence frameworks which have tight targets on inflation, deficits, debts, external balance, etc • This constrains member states’s policy space to implement measures to stimulate job-rich growth SADC Macroeconomic Convergence framework Finance and Investment Protocol Macroeconomic Targets Indicators Inflation annual rate Fiscal Deficit/GDP Public Debt/GDP Current Account/GDP 2008 9.50% 5% 60% 9% Year 2012 5% 3% 60% 9% 2018 3% 1% 60% 3% Source: SADC, 2006. The Achievement of SADC Macroeconomic Convergence Targets Assessment of Performance Reviews and Implementation Plans EAC Macroeconomic Convergence framework Year 2007-10 2011-14 Inflation annual rate <5% <5% Fiscal Deficit/GDP (incl grants)<3% <2% Public Debt/GDP sustainable sustainable External reserves >4 months >6 months Current Account/GDP sustainable sustainable Indicators Source: Kuteesa A, 2012. East African Regional Integration: Challenges in Meeting Convergence Criteria for Monetary Union: A Survey COMESA Macroeconomic Convergence framework Revised Monetary Cooperation Programme of COMESA Indicators Criteria type Inflation annual rate 5% Primary Fiscal Deficit/GDP (Excl grants) 5% Public Debt/GDP (bank financing) 0% Growth 7% secondary Current Account/GDP sustainable Source: Zeidy I, 2013. COMESA Experiences in Macroeconomic Convergence Rethinking Macropolicy framework towards “ dual mandate”…. • • Move away from ‘single mandate’: Adopt ‘dual mandate’ Macropolicy managers should be (a) guardians of stability and (b) active agents of development • Interventions through – counter-cyclical policies – long-term sustainable financing of core development goals – financial inclusion – prudent exchange rate regime and capital account management • Leads to ‘enabling environment’ to promote inclusive growth and structural transformation Monetary Policy Reasonable price stability Growth-inflation trade-off Supply-side shocks, especially food & energy prices Asset price bubbles Financial inclusion Enabling environment Structural transformation Fiscal Policy Fiscal diamond Sustainable financing for Discretionary interventions, e.g.stimulus packages Sustainable financing for Automatic stabilizers Conditional cash transfers for groups outside labour market Employment guarantees / unemployment benefits Infrastructure Skills Health Enabling environment Structural transformation 16 Fiscal Diamond as basis for resource mobilization 1. External resources (% of GDP) Proposed approach in brief • Set employment targets in national development frameworks and macroeconomic policies of central banks • Carefully identify selected high productivity and labour intensive sectors to promote • Particularly valid for Africa, especially resource-rich economies • Natural resource sector capital intensive, adds a great deal to GDP, creates a lot of revenue , but generates few jobs • Hence, need to rely on other sectors to create jobs, especially stable wage employment • Implement labour market policies to integrate various vulnerable groups in the labour market Proposed approach in brief • McKinsey (2012) projections: under a business as usual scenario, the share of good jobs will increase from 28 % today to 32 % by 2020 • Under a ‘jobs strategy’ with a sectoral focus, this proportion expected to increase to 36 % • In absolute terms, this means a projected ‘additional 18 million jobs over present growth levels’ • Sectoral strategies for employment promotion mean : (1) Identification of key sectors and sub-sectors that have the highest potential for creating stable wage employment; (2) identification of the binding constraints that inhibit the sectors from reaching full potential; (3) alleviating binding constraints through appropriate policy interventions Examples of policy interventions with potential to influence sector-led growth and employment Fiscal policy/public expenditure management •Resource mobilization to support public investment in infrastructure, education, health •Fiscal incentives to reward private sector activity with development payoffs •Public procurement policies Monetary policy/financial policies and regulations •Credit guarantee schemes •Selective credit allocation •‘Branchless banking’ •Microfinance institutions Exchange rate regimes and capital account management •Stable and competitive real exchange rate regimes •Capital controls to deal with shortterm capital flows Conclusions • Youth and women productive and decent employment cannot be separated from overall employment. However specific needs of these groups should be addressed to ensure that they are not excluded • The starting point is effective pro-employment macroeconomic policies and sectoral policies to create an enabling environment for inclusive growth and productive employment • Employment targets in national development plans and macroeconomic policies are critical • Policy consistency and harmonization at regional and national level (Agenda 2063; RECs Macroeconomic Convergence Frameworks, etc) • Skills and capabilities development for employability • Labour market policies are essential if tailored at specific needs of youth and women and delivered as a package looking at both demand and supply sides THANK YOU EMAIL: [email protected]