Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Economic crisis to claim 51M jobs

Economic crisis to claim 51M jobs


http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=83958§ionid=3510213



Wed, 28 Jan 2009 15:35:16 GMT

The number of the world's unemployed could reach 230 million.
The economic downturn could result in the loss of up to 51 million jobs worldwide by the end of this year, a UN agency has predicted.

The International Labor Organization (ILO) said on Wednesday that its most optimistic scenario is for 18 million more unemployed at the end of the year, putting the global unemployment rate at 6.1 percent.

"If the recession deepens in 2009, as many forecasters expect, the global jobs crisis will worsen sharply," the ILO said in its report, Global Employment Trends 2009.

"We can expect that for many of those who manage to keep a job, earnings and other conditions of employment will deteriorate."

The ILO also predicted a worse scenario in which 51 million more jobs could be lost by the end of 2009, leading to a 7.1 percent global unemployment rate.

The UN agency said a more realistic scenario would be the loss of 30 million more jobs if the global financial crisis continued for a second a year in 2009, pushing up the world's unemployment rate to 6.5 percent, compared to 6.0 percent in 2008 and 5.7 percent in 2007.

Considering the three scenarios, the total number of unemployed individuals in the world would reach between 198- 230 million people.

The ILO said developing countries suffer most from additional job losses while Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia standing out as regions with extremely harsh labor market conditions.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has cut its forecast for global growth in 2009 to a slight 0.5 percent, the weakest since World War II.
According to ILO estimates, North Africa and the Middle East had the highest unemployment rate at the end of 2008, at 10.3 percent and 9.4 percent respectively.

East Asia had the lowest rate at 3.8 percent, but the ILO said the region could also experience a jump to 4.5-5.5 percent in a year.

"While major capital-intensive new infrastructure projects take time to translate into increased employment, labor-based approaches can generate jobs and much-needed infrastructure quite quickly," the report said.

The report added that 190 million people lost their jobs by the end of 2008 after 11 million jobs were cut worldwide.