The report emphasises that while employment has begun to recover slowly, job quality is deteriorating and there is a growing sense of unfairness. Moreover, given the pressure on governments to rein in expenditure, policy efforts have focused on structural reforms to boost employment creation.
However, if policy instruments are not carefully designed, they could exacerbate the employment situation and aggravate further equity concerns, with potentially long-lasting adverse consequences for both the economy and society.
The report addresses the following questions:
- To what extent has the slow recovery aggravated social conditions, including falling incomes, deepening poverty and worsening inequality?
- Have countries gone too far, too fast with fiscal consolidation?
- How should they support recovery while meeting fiscal goals in the medium term?
- What can be expected from recent labour market reforms?
- How can investment be boosted so as to ensure a long-lasting recovery in both the economy and jobs?
- What have been the barriers to implementing a more job-centred and equity-enhancing policy approach?
- Why has the business-as-usual scenario maintained its centrality despite the increasing risk of social unrest?
Full report (PDF 128pp)
No comments:
Post a Comment