Human Wrongs Watch

Santiago, 15 October 2014 (ILO)* — The unfavorable evolution of the economy in Latin America and the Caribbean during the second half of 2014 will not prevent regional urban unemployment from decreasing slightly this year to 6.0% or 6.1%, from the 6.2% recorded in 2013, according to ECLAC and ILO.

The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and the International Labour Organization (ILO) presented a new edition of their joint report The employment situation in Latin America and the Caribbean, which indicates that while a regional rebound in job creation is not foreseen in 2014, a lower rate of labor market participation -which is to say, the proportion of the working-age population inside the labor force, whether employed or unemployed- should enable unemployment to fall.*

 

 A Year-on-year Fall
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In the document, the United Nations organizations analyze the employment situation during the first half of the year and explain the mechanisms that have helped reduce inequality in the region’s earned incomes in the last decade.
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According to the report, even though country data shows a high degree of heterogeneity, the employment rate at a regional level -meaning the number of employed people versus the total working-age population- continued the decline it had initiated in 2013 during the first half of this year, with a year-on-year fall that put it at 55.7% compared with 56.0% during the same period last year, due mainly to the weaker creation of salaried jobs.
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“Considering these circumstances, and as paradoxical as it may seem, the decline in the unemployment rate is not entirely positive news… The fall in labor force participation that is behind the decreasing unemployment has an impact on the economic autonomy of a growing proportion of the population, especially women,” Alicia Bárcena, ECLAC’s Executive Secretary, and Elizabeth Tinoco, ILO’s Regional Director, stated in the document’s introduction.
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Positive Assessment of Labor Markets
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Despite the current stagnation, the overall assessment of the region’s labor markets during recent years is positive. Beyond the situation today, the report analyzes the virtuous links between employment formalization and improvements in labor income distribution.
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After the 2008-2009 crisis, employment formalization kept growing, which not only favored women’s greater productive insertion, but also helped reduce the gap in labor income seen between employed workers with lower and higher education levels.
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Between 2009 and 2013, formal jobs grew 12.7% (53.4% of total employment), while informal jobs grew just 2.6% (46.6%). Meanwhile, total income distribution (formal and informal employment) improved by 0.62 percentage points between those years.
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This increase in labor formality has especially benefited salaried employees, workers with intermediate schooling levels, and women, the document specifies. (*Source: ILO News).
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2014 Human Wrongs Watch