A Bleak
Unemployment Report and even Bleaker Projections
By Peter
Koenig
January 20,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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This is a
transcript of an interview of Dr. Peter Koenig with
PressTV, focussing on the recently released ILO
Unemployment Report.
The interview
is preceded by a brief news summary of the ILO
report.
According to
AFP, January 19, 2016:
“Global
unemployment rose in 2015 and is expected to worsen
further over the next two years, the International
Labour Organization said Tuesday, citing downturns
in key emerging economies. In a new report, the ILO
estimated that 197.1 million working-age people were
unemployed in 2015, an uptick of 0.7 percent
compared to 2014 figures. In 2016, the figure is
expected to rise by a further 2.3 million, with
another 1.1 million people added to the jobless
roster in 2017, the report said. The figures also
made clear that employment rates have not recovered
from the financial crash of 2008, as 27 million more
people were out of work last year as compared to the
pre-crisis level.
“The global
economy is not generating enough jobs,” ILO chief
Guy Ryder told journalists.
He pointed to
“the significant slowdown in emerging markets
coupled with a sharp decline in commodity prices”,
as the culprits fuelling a grim outlook for the
global job market. – The report said that much of
the trouble in the developing world stems from
struggling Brazil and especially China, which last
year saw its slowest GDP growth in a quarter
century. Once key drivers of global job growth,
major emerging economies in Asia and Latin America
will likely see unemployment rise this year, as will
Arab and African nations [which] are heavily reliant
on commodity sales, according to the report. –
Unemployment is expected to fall slightly in
advanced economies, but not by enough to fully
offset the losses in the developing world, the ILO
said. The report forecasts that in the United States
and some other advanced economies, “unemployment
will decline to pre-crisis rates.”
The ILO
sounded specific alarm on the ever-rising numbers of
people worldwide who have “vulnerable
employment”, a term referring to low quality,
unstable work, without formal contracts or benefits
and with huge volatility in compensation. In
addition to jobless figures, the ILO has typically
used the vulnerable employment rate to assess the
true health of an economy. In emerging markets, the
number of people with vulnerable work is expected to
grow by 25 million over the next three years, the
report said.
PressTV
Question: What do you make of this report?
Peter Koenig
Response:
Summing up
ILO’s projections – By 2017 more than 300 million
people are likely to be unemployed. This does not
include a shadow figure of at least another 30% to
50%, especially from developing countries where no
exact statistics are held and where the line between
partial employment and unemployment is blurred.
The projected
300 million-plus in 2017 do not account either for
the more than 60 million refugees which according to
UNHCR are currently on the move or in camps
throughout world. Their situation is extremely
precarious, considering health, nutrition and other
social factors – and they are practically all
unemployed.
The
flood of refugees into Europe, especially Germany,
will create more unemployment. And there is a
purpose behind it: Washington wants Europe divided
and working for their corporations as so-called
low-wage hi-tech servants.
Even in the
US, real unemployment, if it were to be accounted
for like it was in the 1990s, or like it is in some
European countries, would be between 20% and 25%,
not the 5% currently claimed by the Labor
Department.
PressTV: What
do you think are the causes for this bleak outlook
on unemployment?
PK:
Mr. Ryder does
not talk about, what are the origins of the
financial crisis – of the ongoing crisis – of the
crisis with no end in sight.
This crisis is
not ‘just happening’ – it is directed, fabricated
and maintained by a globalized elite, led by
Washington and supported by the Pentagon and NATO,
fuelling wars and conflicts throughout the world.
Wars are
highly profitable for the military industrial
complex; and they are highly destructive, leaving
entire countries without infrastructure and
productive capacity – like Syria – hence
unemployment becomes astronomical.
The worldwide
economic crisis is manipulated by the very purpose
of ‘Globalization’ – where rich industrialized
countries transfer their manufacturing to cheap
labor countries, where vulnerable and precarious
jobs are created – no social insurances, no job
security – minimal and barely living wages.
Poor people
who are at the edge of survival cannot stand up for
their rights; they have to fight for daily survival
of their families.
The global
financial – and industrial elite that is
manipulating crisis after crisis- and therefore
creating unemployment at will (unemployment is a
‘cushion’ for wage repression, a tool of the
capitalist system) – can continue the crisis mode
only as long as it uses the current fiat dollar
based monetary system; only this system makes
it possible to impose totally illegal ‘sanctions’ on
countries that do not behave according to
Washington’s dictate.
Sanctions also
create unemployment.
I agree with
ILO’s chief, Mr. Ryder – “this needs to change”.
And the
solution is not that far-fetched: It means getting
out of this nefarious and criminal dollar system,
de-dollarize and de-globalize the world.
Russia-China,
the other BRICS and the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation
Organization) countries making up about one third of
the world’s GDP and about half of the world’s
population – are about ready to launch an
alternative monetary system.
Peter Koenig
is an economist and geopolitical analyst. He is also
a former World Bank staff and worked extensively
around the world in the fields of environment and
water resources. He is the author of
Implosion – An Economic Thriller about War,
Environmental Destruction and Corporate Greed
– fiction based on facts and on 30 years of
World Bank experience around the globe. He is also a
co-author of
The World Order and Revolution! – Essays from
the Resistance.
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