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OpinionsWorkforce World Over To Face Great Hardship In 2023

Workforce World Over To Face Great Hardship In 2023

Date:

BY SATYAKI CHAKRABORTY

Workforce over would face greater hardship in 2023. IMF has already sounded alarm over the grim global situation in their latest World Economic
Outlook. More than a third of the global is expected to slip into recession in 2023, while the three large economies – the United States, the European
Union, and China – would continue to stall, IMF Economic Counsellor Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas has said. According to the IMF assessment made before the
emergence of the new COVID-19 in China, the global economic growth was likely to fall to 2.7 per cent with a 25 per cent probability that it might fall below 2
per cent. The China nightmare that has threatened every part of the world would additionally caste its shadow. It would distort the labour market.
With no end to the Russia-Ukraine war in sight, commodity prices and food supply chain are expected to be volatile. “We expect global inflation … remain
elevated for a longer than previously expected,” IMF October outlook had said projecting global inflation projections at 8.8 per cent in 2022. China's new
COVID-19 outbreak is an evolving situation, in which one million people are expected to die within 90 days, with over 60 per cent infection in China and over 10
per cent globally. It may disrupt the entire supply chain of the world, and several sectors of the economy are threatened a significant reduction in their activity.
Millions of people had already been laid off, especially in IT sector, in 2022 due to global economic downturn, in which migrant workers have suffered the worst,
that has been threatened further by China's disastrous new COVID-19 spread.
The ILO flagship Global Wage Report 2020-23 released on November 30, just a week before the outbreak of new COVID-19 after the relaxation given on
zero-COVID policy of China on December 7, has included evidence on how the inflation was biting into the real wage growth in most regions of the world. The
report shows that for the first time in the 21st century real wages growth has fallen to negative values while, at the same time, the gap between real productivity
growth and real wage growth continues to widen.
During the earlier COVID-19 crisis from 2020-2022, the various components of the wage bills – such as employment, nominal wages, and inflation – have
changed, and more recently the situation has aggravated during the cost-of-living crisis. Wage inequality and gender pay gap has been on the increase which
has worsened the income inequality in different regions of the world. The UN and the ILO has al along been urging the world to adopt appropriate policies for a
human-centred economic recovery, but only a little has been done to date, while crises have been multiplying.
ILO report shows that wages and the purchasing power of households have been dented considerably during the past three years, fist by the COVID-19
pandemic and then, as the world economy started to recover from that crisis, by the global rise in inflation. In 2022, rising inflation caused the real wage to dip
into negative in many countries, reducing the purchasing power of the middle class and hitting low-income groups particularly hard.
In the near future, in absence of adequate policy responses, the workforce could see a sharp erosion of the real incomes, increase in inequality, further
threatening the economic recovery and possibly fuelling further social unrest, the ILO report had warned just a week before the emergence of the new COVID-
19 outbreak in China.
In the global economic downturn and labour market context, the ILO report has pointed out that the improvement in employment level witnessed by the
second quarter of 2022 was limited to only high income countries, while it remained at about 2 per cent below the pre-pandemic level in middle- and low-
income countries. Employment in the informal economy was found to be rising faster than in the formal economy. During the last two quarters of 2022, inflation

remained quite stubborn with rapid price rise, despite a global response tightening of monetary policy since mid-2022. The projection of inflation for 2023 made
before the world threatening China new COVID-19 outbreak stood elevated at 6.5 per cent.
In the inflationary context, erosion in real wages comes on top of some significant wage losses incurred by workers and their families during the three years
of pandemic during 2020-2022. Governments world over showing their data to tell the people that average wages increased globally by 1.5 per cent in 2020,
and by 1.8 per cent in 2021, but is should be interpreted in the context of job losses and change in the composition of employment in large countries such as in
the US.
The mathematical fallacy should be noted and people should know how this data has improved despite increase in joblessness, and low-paid . The ILO
report has said, “In these countries, a majority of those who lost their jobs and hence their earning during the pandemic were low-paid wage employees, while
their higher-paid counterparts remained employed, thereby increasing the estimated average wage.” As a result of this “composition effect” in some countries,
average real wages in the advanced economies jumped by 1.7 per cent in 2020, the highest wage growth recorded in many years, but then increased by
a much lower rate of 0.4 per cent in 2021, ILO said.
With slowdown of the global economy and rising inflation real wages of workers have been on the decli ne, while unemployment, job losses, and lack of job
opportunity remained a dominant feature of the job market. With prospect of further deterioration in global economic growth, job market condition would
certainly deteriorate in 2023, with additional uncertainly of evolving new COVID-19 threat from China. The world needs human-centric policy response with
complete social security coverage for the workforce.

(IPA Service)

Northlines
Northlines
The Northlines is an independent source on the Web for news, facts and figures relating to Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh and its neighbourhood.

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