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    27 September 2010

    Precarious work makes for a precarious recovery




    Ronald Janssen
    This week, trade unions in Europe will stage massive protests against the sharp turn economic policy in Europe has taken. After having saved the banking system from total collapse, governments throughout Europe are not only cutting public services and social benefits. On top of this harsh fiscal austerity, several member states also intend to inject an even greater dose of flexibility into their labour markets. These governments adhere to the conventional wisdom that, by allowing business to get rid of workers more easily, employers will advance in time the decision to (re)hire workers. In turn, the additional purchasing power coming from the frontloading of jobs would support aggregate demand and accelerate economic recovery.
    Meanwhile, business is certainly more than ever interested in easy firing or flexible labour contracts and this for two reasons in particular. Having in mind the sudden and spectacular collapse of demand and activity that companies faced at the end of 2008, management is now reluctant to hire workers on the basis of open ended contracts. Another motive for business to turn to short term contracts is the credit squeeze that many companies have been or still are facing as a result of the financial crisis. To reduce dependency on bank lending, business is now keen to maximize profits as a source of new capital and one way to cut wages and increase profits is to hire temporary workers who tend to be cheaper than regular labour (see below).
    By engaging in this flexibility crusade, policy makers are making a big mistake and are running the risk of accomplishing the opposite effect of stalling and weakening economic recovery. To understand this, one needs to understand the nature and extent of the damages temporary contracts inflict upon workers.
    First of all, temporary contracts come with a high wage discount. A recent study by the IMF finds that, even when correcting for factors such as education and tenure of permanent contracts, temporary workers systematically receive lower wages than workers in open ended contracts (IMF 2010). For most European countries, the wage gap is around 15 to 25%, with one country (Sweden) recording a wage gap as high as 44%. While the size of the wage gap between temporary contracts and regular work contracts is casting doubts on whether the principle of ‘equal pay for equal work’ is being respected around Europe, the fact that there is such a wage gap is in itself not so surprising: temporary workers are vulnerable workers. Employers have the power not to prolong the temporary contract or, alternatively, employers become ‘invisible’ to their own work force by using agency work. This makes temporary workers willing to do the same job for lower wages. And with employers hiring workers on a temporary basis instead of on the basis of open ended contracts, the additional purchasing power that is injected into the economy is seriously reduced.
    Second, not only do workers in temporary contracts gain lower wages, they also tend to consume less and save more. One reason is the insecurity that is inherent in the nature of these contracts and which drives workers to increase precautionary savings. There is also a ‘Ricardian’ effect at work here: with rates of transition into regular contracts sometimes as low as 12% even after a period of one year (IMF 2010), temporary contracts often work as a ‘bad job’ trap. When hiring, employers often discriminate against workers having a history of temporary contracts. Business also tends to provides temporary workers with less access to continuous training. Facing the possibility of remaining stuck in a chain of insecure and low paid fixed term contracts for years to come, these workers will discount the prospect of future depressed revenue flows into lower consumption at present.
    Third, and in contrast to the widespread view that core workers are too protected to be affected by flexibility, there are spillover effects on the rest of the workforce. The sheer use of temporary contracts functions as a severe threat to workers under open ended contracts to be careful not to lose their job and find themselves in a situation in which they in turn would be forced into precarious contracts when re entering the labour market. This makes the work force to be more inclined to accept wage cuts, longer working hours and other degradations of their rights in order to preserve their present job situation.
    In short, ‘flexibility’ all too often boils down to ‘flexploitation’. This raises a key question: can flexibility compensate for its negative impact on wages and aggregate demand by generating sufficient new jobs? The answer to this is negative. In fact, the illusion that flexibility improves an economy’s job performance has been shattered by the same institution which has been relentlessly pushing the case for flexible labour markets for more than a decade. In 2006, when examining the outcomes of its so-called ‘Jobs Strategy’, the OECD itself was forced to admit that the evidence to support the claim that flexible labour markets are good for jobs simply was not there (OECD 2006).
    Moreover, the analysis should be taken a step further. Since the beginning of the 1990s, reforms of labour law in rich countries have systematically provided business with several alternatives to hiring workers under open ended contracts. As a result, the share of temporary contracts in dependant employment has seen a structural increase, from 12% in the mid-90s to 14% in 2008. The rising incidence of temporary work, combined with the OECD conclusion that flexibility does not create jobs, implies that there have been important substitution effects: Thanks to more flexible labour laws, ‘bad jobs’ have driven out ‘good jobs’. Business is now able to turn jobs which are basically stable and which would have been created anyway into short term labour contracts. The economic reality is often that the same worker has been doing the same job for the same company for many years whereas the legal reality is that this worker is caught in a chain of fixed-term contracts.
    The bottom line is that labour market flexibility does not result in ‘job rich growth’ but in ‘job destructive stagnation’ instead. Any potentially positive effect that might arise because employers would hire workers in a somewhat earlier phase of the business cycle, simply pales against the negative effects on aggregate demand coming from the spread of temporary work practices (serious wage discount, rising precautionary savings, more acceptance of wage moderation by core workers and, last but not least, the transformation of regular jobs into precarious contracts). Flexibility therefore represents an important downwards risk for the present recovery: If the initial and fragile recovery of demand, which is now mainly coming from exports to the rest of the world, evaporates into the black hole of an increasingly flexible, insecure and underpaid work force, any hope of moving the economy into a process of strong and self-sustaining growth will disappear with it.
    The irony is that by resorting to temporary work practices, business itself is shaping the hesitating and weak recovery companies are afraid of in the first place. So instead of once again giving in to the short sighted wishing list of European business, governments need to do the opposite and intervene to keep individual companies from imposing precarious labour relationships on their work force. To save the recovery, labour law in Europe needs to be strengthened instead of being weakened. A strict implementation of the new agency work directive and the principle of equal pay for equal work would be a first step forward. Another step would be to upgrade existing social directives and agreements by seeing to it that the principles of these directives are respected to the letter, with particular emphasis on the principle that atypical jobs should remain the exception and not become the rule.

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    Ronald Janssen works as an economic adviser in Brussels.

    References
    IMF (2010). World Economic Outlook April 2010 (chapter3), Washington DC.
    OECD (2006) Employment Outlook. Paris.

    20 September 2010

    Working for decent work for all everywhere




    Juan Somavia
    The global crisis has, once again, illustrated how central decent work is to the lives of women and men everywhere, to the stability of families and peace of communities. Encouragingly the crisis has also set off bold and decisive decisions to counter the downturn. Useful lessons can be drawn from the last 18 months during which the prevailing economic consensus was turned on its head. Rising to the challenge of the global jobs crisis requires a thorough rethink of the relationships between economic growth and employment. A high level of productive employment should be an objective of the same order as low and stable inflation and sound public finances.
    A global employment challenge
    Today, half of the world’s labour force of 3.2 billion is in various forms of vulnerable employment. Some 1.2 billion persons work and live in poverty. Out of every 10 persons, 2 have access to basic social protection. This crisis existed before the last global crisis.
    During the Great Recession, employment dropped by approximately one per cent. Globally 212 million persons are unemployed and looking for work. Two unemployed persons in 5 are young women and men aged 15-24 years. In many countries the number of unemployed workers discouraged from active job search, and those working involuntarily in part time occupations, has risen dramatically. In emerging and developing countries lost wage employment is replaced by lower quality informal employment. In all countries the rate of growth of real wages has slowed considerably, or wages have stagnated or fallen.
    The outlook for tomorrow: the world will require some 440 million new jobs over the next ten years just to keep up with the growth in the labour force.
    Pulling these strands together, the world is facing a momentous employment challenge.
    Encouraging initial responses to the crisis
    Fiscal and monetary policies have been used decisively to counter the fall in economic activity as of late 2008. The recommendation of the IMF to invest 2 per cent of GDP in counter-cyclical fiscal spending has been by and large heeded by governments. This additional funding is tapering off in 2010.
    In June 2009 the International Labour Conference adopted a Global Jobs Pact with strong backing from governments, employers and trade unions from ILO member States. The Pact is essentially a template for employment, labour and social policies, based on the Decent Work Agenda, to counter the crisis. It has inspired and continues to inspire many countries. The central purpose of the Pact is to shorten as much as possible the lag, observed in many previous crises, between economic recovery and recovery of employment.
    The G20 has given strong impetus to international coordination. During 2009, in London and in Pittsburgh, G20 Leaders recognized the significant impact of the crisis on employment. Leaders committed to “restoring the global economy to full health” so that “hard-working families the world over can find decent jobs”. To that end they called for “an employment-oriented framework for future economic growth” pledging to put “quality jobs at the heart of the recovery”.
    Crisis responses included extension of unemployment benefits, broader coverage of social protection programmes, additional spending on infrastructure, support for small enterprises, and a range of measures, from working time adjustments to employment subsidies, to cushion the impact of the downturn on employment.
    The ILO has estimated that the extraordinary fiscal stimulus and automatic stabilizers have saved or generated 21 million jobs across G20 countries in 2009 and 2010, equivalent to one per cent of total employment in these countries.
    Accelerating recovery in employment
    Two years on from the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the world is gradually recovering from the recession, but at very different speeds across regions, and in the midst of heightened risks of an overall weak recovery in employment. Accelerating recovery in employment remains the overriding priority.
    Emerging and developing countries are recovering more quickly, and employment growth is close to pre-crisis levels in the third quarter of 2010. These economies, and a few industrialized countries, are benefitting from strong growth in China. By and large they have avoided a financial crisis with bank lending being a key counter-cyclical instrument. Brazil, China and India are facing shortages of skilled labour, calling for better policies to link vocational education and training to the needs of enterprises. The key challenge for these countries, to sustain their growth, is the gradual raising of the quality of labour, the most direct route to expand domestic consumption. This requires a range of measures from labour market policies to broader social protection and better pass through of productivity gains to wages.
    In the United States, Japan and Europe in 2010 and the next few years, growth is likely to be too weak for employment to recover rapidly. Although unemployment may have peaked, it is likely to remain high for some years. There is a real risk of long term unemployment leaving permanent scars on persons. Measures specifically targeted at employment can help, such as targeted subsidies, skills development and job search assistance. Even in countries with fiscal constraints, such measures are cost effective.
    One of the reasons why the crisis was more short lived in emerging countries than in higher income countries is the functioning of credit markets, which expanded in the former and dried up in the latter. Still today bank credit to the real economy is well below pre-crisis levels in advanced countries, constraining job growth in small enterprises.
    Thinking differently about economic growth and employment and decent work
    The global employment challenge is with us. The ILO is playing its role, in close cooperation with employers ‘organisations and the trade union movement, and with other global institutions, such as the IMF, UNDP, WHO, and WTO, to alert and mobilize governments on the central role of balanced responses combining employment, investment, sustainable enterprises, labour market institutions, social dialogue and social protection.
    For a number of objective reasons, linked to the severe social impact of this crisis, the unsustainable pattern of globalization, the changing geography of world output, the support for the Decent Work Agenda is being reinforced at the highest political levels, among global, regional and national institutions and across public opinion. This broad and encouraging acceptance is increasingly translated into tangible policy shifts. Much more is needed.
    For the world to tackle the global employment challenge, it must think differently about how macroeconomic policy addresses employment. A high level of productive employment and decent work must become a national priority, and benefit from the same consensus, across all government policies (central bank included) as low inflation and sound public finances. Employment policies are cost effective as they tend to raise the potential output level, reduce compensatory social expenditure and maintain social stability.
    Thinking differently is a responsibility of all, especially the readers of this column. Several critical and protracted issues need to be addressed in a different way if the world is not to return to the same unsustainable pattern of globalization as before the crisis.
    Let me mention a few of these issues. In a world awash in liquidity, productive investment is far too low. Aggregate demand is deficient. The financialization of the economy is distorting the real economy. Investment and employment are suffering from these distortions. Rising inequality and weakened middle classes have been identified as one of the proximate causes of the crisis. The share of wages in total income is declining globally, with wages trailing productivity increases. Tax policies have become less progressive. Together these trends are weakening aggregate demand and hence future growth. Small enterprises are the engine of employment generation, but struggle to provide decent conditions of work. Institutions for social dialogue vary greatly in their contribution to decent work outcomes. A universal floor of basic social protection is an achievable objective. Holders of public purses must be convinced of the multiple benefits deriving from it, from lower poverty to less consumption volatility and empowerment of persons. Incentives and investments in green jobs and in a just transition to greater energy efficiency are the seeds of future sustainable growth.
    At the ILO, a fair globalization providing opportunities for all is a better path to sustained global growth and stability. Recent discussions at the International Labour Conference are profiling the ILO as a major source of “thinking differently” whilst remaining true to our values balancing economic and social advancement. Let us deepen and broaden our analysis and discussions.

    Download this article as pdf

    Juan Somavia is Director-General of the International Labour Organisation (ILO).

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