Global Crisis Needs a Global Coordinated Response
The Global Crisis Needs a Global Coordinated Response
Brussels, 24 June 2009 (ITUC OnLine): As the United Nations kicks off a major three-day Conference in New York on the World Financial and Economic Crisis and its Impact on Development, (24-26 June, 2009), the ITUC is drawing the attention of world leaders to the severe human costs of the deepening slowdown in the global economy. This is most evident in the jobs crisis, with increasing income inequality, rapid increases in unemployment, and growing hunger and poverty in developing countries. Women are bearing a disproportionate share of the hardships brought on by the global crisis.
This unprecedented global crisis
requires global, coordinated responses, forged in an
inclusive manner, where the representatives of the
developing countries that are bearing much of the brunt of
the crisis have a say in policy-making. The United Nations
provides such a forum. Trade unions are therefore calling on
Member States to adopt a strong, pro-development Outcome
Document of the UN Conference. This would serve to initiate
an inclusive, democratic process towards real and lasting
solutions to the crisis.
“Functional linkages between
the UN and the G20 processes must be established, in the
interests of inclusive, democratic global governance, and
policy coherence,“ said ITUC General Secretary Guy Ryder.
“The Global Jobs Pact just adopted at the ILO Jobs Crisis
Summit must be an integral part of the global policy
response,” continued Ryder. “It offers a comprehensive
blueprint which puts employment and social protection at the
heart of economic recovery efforts. Its recommendations
should be fully supported in the UN Conference Outcome
Document.”
A ten-member trade union delegation will be bringing these messages to the conference, and calling on Member States to make the recommendations of the Global Jobs Pact a centre-piece of countercyclical policies. These must focus on public infrastructure investment, special employment programmes, social protection, and bring about a shift to a low-carbon growth path that creates green and decent jobs.
Trade unions are further calling on governments to support the Recommendations of the Commission of Experts set up to provide policy guidance to the conference, and chaired by Prof. Joseph Stiglitz. The so-called Stiglitz Commission Report recommends fiscal stimulus measures to finance countercyclical policies that restore long-term growth, reduce income inequality, and eradicate poverty. Trade unions are insisting that developing countries must have the policy space they need to implement the countercyclical policies recommended in the report, devoid of harmful policy conditionalities of the IFIs.
Trade unions are calling for systemic reforms to
restore growth with equity, and minimize the risk of
recurrence of financial crises. These include regulatory
reform of financial institutions and transactions,
corrective actions to ensure fair trade, and establishment
of a debt workout mechanism.
Member States at the UN
must also move decisively on global governance reforms,
including IFI reforms. They must place social priorities at
the centre of international governance, with the setting up
of a Global Economic Council (GEC), which will be the locus
of forging a new global consensus on sustainable development
policies, and systemic reforms that are needed to restore
lasting growth. An International Panel should be established
to serve as an advisory body to the GEC. This panel should
include representatives of trade unions.
Member States
need to support the completion of an ambitious agreement by
the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) at Copenhagen in December 2009. This will require
action on Green Jobs, financing of support for developing
countries, and the inclusion of “just transition”
strategies in the agreement to be adopted in Copenhagen.
Details of the ITUC’s Recommendations for the Outcome
Document of the UN Conference are contained in the ITUC
Statement to the Conference, and presented in succinct form
in the Executive Summary.
These documents are
available at:
http://www.ituc-csi.org/spip.php?article3921&var_mode=calcul
Further details of Global Unions’ proposals to end the global economic and financial crisis are contained in the trade union statements to the G8 L’Aquila Summit (Italy, July 2009) and G20 London Summit (April 2009) These documents are available at:
http://www.tuac.org/en/public/e-docs/00/00/04/E0/document_doc.phtml
http://www.ituc-csi.org/IMG/pdf/No_16_-_G20_London_Declaration_FINAL.pdf
The ITUC represents 170 million workers in 312 affiliated national organisations from 157 countries. http://www.ituc-csi.org http://www.youtube.com/ITUCCSI
ENDS