177 lines
8.7 KiB
Markdown
177 lines
8.7 KiB
Markdown
# Terms of Reference
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- attention to root causes of inequalities of work
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- drivers and determinants across all dimensions
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- addressing both distribution and redistribution
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- seen as the most innovative one (?)
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- fundamental principles and rights in intl labor standards
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- social dialogue and tripartism
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- interconnectedness, integration and monitoring
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- country-specific approaches
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the assignment will:
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- explain what inequalities in the world of work are
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- why they should be addressed
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- what is added value of ILO doing so
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with target groups:
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- ILO staff & constitutents
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- external stakeholders & partners
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objectives:
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- general: support position of ILO as key actor in ongoing debates and initiatives of multilateral system on poverty and inequalities
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- 1: improve understanding of what inequalities in the world of work are
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- root causes
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- their linkages
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- how they feed into outcomes
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- 2: identify evidence-based policy responses to prevent and reduce inequalities in the world of work
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- minimizing of inequalities
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- reducing the outcomes of inequalities
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dates:
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- Sep 30:
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- draft detailed outline for conceptual framework
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- chapter indication
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- definition of inequalities in world of work, drivers and determinants
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- Oct 30:
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- annotated bibliography identifying effective and evidence-based policy responses to adress inequality in world of work
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- annotated bibl will inform dev of conceptual framework
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- presentation to task force to gather inputs and views from diff departments
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## Working Strategy
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### Identifying root causes of LM inequalities
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- a fundamental typology of inequalities within the LM *and* beyond the labor market is necessary
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- as ILO recognizes inequalities generate feedback cycles
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- within a life cycle and inter-generationally (through inequalities of outcomes)
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- to understand inequalities in the world of work, those beyond should not be a black box
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- gender/socio-demographic/pre-existing inequalities
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- put very simply:
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- it might make sense for a mother to move away from a job to a space with better educational access for her child and the resulting issue should concern *both*
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- access to better education in the original region
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- the impact of better job availability or active labour market policies in the new region
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- for each form of work to understand the primary inequalities in the LM
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- we need to understand how pre-existing inequalities feed into them as independent variables
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- often this will take the form of e.g. socio-demographic inequalities reflecting income inequalities
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- but not always, and that is the locating of the root causes I would see as primary goal for the first part of the review
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### Identifying evidence-based policy responses which address these inequalities
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- if we manage to break open the black box of root causes in this way
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- for vertical but especially for horizontal inequalities
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- it should make it easier to analyze the impacts of policies removing inequalities for
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- the causes they help reduce the effect of
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- the impact on labour market inequalities itself
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- and the effects on resulting equality/inequalities of opportunity
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# Conceptual definitions
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labour
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'nature of work'
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work
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worlds of work
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inequality in work
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## forms of work
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paid employment work
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own-use production work
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unpaid work
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care work
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volunteer work
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unpaid trainee work
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## labor market outcomes
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employment
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unemployment
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underemployment
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labour force participation
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self-employment/informality
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labour productivity
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skills
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wages/earnings
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hours worked
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job security
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social protection coverage
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labour mobility
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## socio-demographic categories
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gender
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ethnicity
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race
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age
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disability
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## types of inequalities (in worlds of work)
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general characteristics of inequality:
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- 'pre-world of work' inequalities; starting well before individuals enter world of work
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- unequal opportunities to healthcare, literacy, quality education
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- often borne from poverty, gender, family background, lack of legal status/identity
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- others often born with many advantages that give easy opportunistic access to build human capital
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- inequality of opportunities !== inequality of outcome
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- often, today's inequalities affect future (generations') opportunities
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- high levels of current inequality = reduction in future social mobility
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- conversely, (some?) focus should be put on equality of outcome today to ensure equality of opportunity tomorrow
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- while focusing on these intra-country horizontal inequalities, inter-country inequalities (esp income inequality, but predisposing other as well) should not be neglected
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- distinction between:
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- vertical inequality
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- between all households in a country
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- horizontal inequality
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- betweek different groups
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- disparities in employment outcomes, labour rights, opportunities between groups depending on gender, age, nationality, ethnicity, health status, disability or other characteristics
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forms of inequality:
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- access to essential services (health, education, housing)
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- income inequality
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- access to means of subsistence (esp related to employment)
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- gender inequality (part of horizontal, being one of the 'greatest forms of inequality today')
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- results in gender-based violence, harassment, domestic violence, unpaid care work
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- especially girls often facing unequal opportunities and 'persistent gender stereotypes in their access to education and health services and in other aspects of life' [13, ILC]
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- in most regions wome over-represented among poorest and under-represented among richest people (esp in SoutAs;EastAs;Pacific regions)
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- born primarily from unequal access to quality education, inequalities and injustices in labour market participation, gender earnings gaps
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- often also results in children being exposed to severe health and food deprivation and differences in control over assets (capital/land)
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- recently exacerbated by COVID-19 reversing equality progress through increased women's/men's paid/unpaid/care work inequalities
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- girls/boys from ethnic minorities, indigenous, tribal populations, remote rural areas often facing barriers accessing quality education & essential services
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- indigenous people account for 6% of world pop but 19% of extreme poor
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- stark contrast between migrant workers' high labour force participation rates and large proportion of low-income households
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- spatial inequalities (rural/urban; small/large cities; richt/poor regions)
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- contributes to overall more fractures/unequal societies
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- intersectional inequalities (made possible to highlight by vert/horiz inequality split)
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- unequal distribution of work & labour income
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- among workforce among most important determinants of inequality
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- unemployment: forecloses income prospects; highest rate in young people
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- underemployment:
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- low wages make meeting basic needs impossible (esp. food, healthcare, education, decent housing)
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- including differentiation time-related underemployment (would like to work more paid hours); potential labour force (would like to work but not actively searching or not available for work); creates (way) higher numbers than purely unemployment numbers - especially in LIC
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- recently, (COVID-19) women, young people, less educated, low earners less likely to keep their jobs
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## types of policies
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- income:
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- difference between primary distribution ('market income', through property and employment) and secondary distribution ('disposable income', through taxes and transfers), and tertiary distribution (public services)
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- tax and transfers redistributing incomes towards greater equality in disposable income
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- extent of redistribution limited by small fiscal resources (e.g. through informal labour predominance)
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- policies to reduce income difference between urban/rural, ethnic minorities/majority one of main drivers of reduced income inequality (LAC region)
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# Summary draft
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- pre-world of work characteristics already taking huge influence on labour market and related equality of outcomes
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- inequality in access to essential services (health, education, housing)
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- inequality in access to means of subsistence (esp related to employment)
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- income inequality huge driver of resulting inequalities, in turn already influenced by characteristics, additionally:
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- spatial inequality
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- gender inequality
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- employment inequality:
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- unemployment: forecloses income prospects; highest rate in young people
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- underemployment: low wages make meeting basic needs impossible (esp. food, healthcare, education, decent housing)
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- split into time-related underemployment and potential labour force
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