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- Date submitted: 1 Nov 2011
- Stakeholder type: United Nations & Other IGOs
- Name: International Labour Organization (ILO)
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INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION
ILO contribution to the Compilation document
to serve as a basis for the preparation of zerodraft
of the outcome document of the UN
Conference on Sustainable Development
Contents
Preamble: Common statement by the UN System Chief Executives Board for Coordination
(CEB) on the Outcome of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development ............. 1
Sustainable development and poverty reduction: Decent work and green jobs in a green
economy ......................................................................................................................................... 3
I. Renewed commitments, implementation gaps, emerging issues ................................ 4
Renewed commitments ............................................................................................................ 4
Implementation gaps ................................................................................................................ 4
Emerging issues ....................................................................................................................... 6
II. Green Economy in the framework of sustainable development and poverty
eradication ............................................................................................................................. 7
Implications of the transition to a green economy for employment, poverty and sustainable
development ............................................................................................................................. 7
III. Institutional framework for a green economy ........................................................... 12
Mechanisms and institutions for policy coherence ................................................................ 12
Preamble: Common statement by the UN System
Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB)
on the Outcome of the United Nations
Conference on Sustainable Development
1. We, members of the United Nations System Chief Executives Board, recognize the
historic opportunity provided by the United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Development to reset the world on a sustainable development path.
2. We affirm that sustainable development is a top priority for our organizations, and
reaffirm the continuing validity of the principles in the 1992 Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development and of Agenda 21, including the principle of common
but differentiated responsibilities. We recommit to a renewed system-wide effort, in
partnership with the full range of governmental, civil society and private sector
stakeholders, to support the realization of these principles.
3. Despite substantial improvement in many key areas of development and environment,
the world has not made the progress towards sustainable development aspired to in the
outcomes of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development held in
Rio de Janeiro in 1992, and in subsequent related world conferences.
4. Over the past twenty years, the world has witnessed strong economic growth and
significant progress toward attaining a number of the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs). It is of grave concern, however, that these positive trends have been
accompanied by increasing disparities and inequalities, persistent gender inequality,
social inequity, a growing deterioration of the environment, and recurrent economic,
financial, energy and food crises.
5. At the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (or Rio+20), renewed
commitment and urgent action are therefore needed to lay a firm foundation for a
longer-term process of redressing imbalances, agreeing on priorities, and reforming
institutional arrangements at all levels, to bring about coherence and the Integration of
policies across the economic, environmental and social pillars, with human beings and
their well-being at the centre. The Conference must also address the means of
implementing outcomes, through the provision of resources, including for technological
transformation and capacity building.
6. Charting the way forward to eradicate poverty and promote sustainable development
must start with the recognition that the world has changed in fundamental ways.
Climate change is significantly altering the physical and human geography of the planet.
There are major differences in population growth, age, sex structures, spatial
distribution and patterns of movement; resource consumption has increased, and
production patterns are more unsustainable. But there has also been wide-ranging
technological progress, from renewable energy and energy efficiency, to innovative
measures for adapting to climate change impacts, and new and efficient means for
social networking, dialogue and participatory engagement, providing opportunities that
were not available twenty years ago.
7. Against these changing parameters, Rio+20 must acknowledge that economic, social and
environmental objectives are not independent variables, but are mutually supportive,
with progress in each area facilitating advancement in the others. Our objectives should
be to enhance equity, revitalize the global economy, and protect the planet and its
ecosystems that support us so that all people, women, men and children, can live in
dignity.
8. The sustainability of future growth and development will rely critically on innovation,
improved economic, energy and natural resource efficiency, an open and supportive
multilateral trading system, better fiscal policies providing incentives for sustainability,
comprehensive wealth accounting and valuation of ecosystem services, equitable access
and inclusive political processes, and the capacity to create sufficient decent work.
Growth must lead to strengthened resilience ? of households, ecosystems, and
economies, and improved water, food and nutrition security.
9. Economic growth must be of high quality and inclusive. It should occur hand in hand
with relevant efforts to accelerate progress in global health, gender equality and
women?s empowerment, the realization of human rights, greater equity, improved
access to and quality of social protection and the rule of law, and the fair distribution of
the benefits of development. Policies must avoid trade protectionism and negative
impacts, especially on the poor and vulnerable groups such as refugees and internally
displaced persons. These objectives are all key elements of the green economy
approach, and we pledge the support of our organizations to Member States as they
engage in this critical and transformational transition.
10. The shift to sustainable development presents challenges, but also offers opportunity
for substantial investments, both public and private, in productive infrastructure,
technological transformation, science, education and human capital development. The
UN system stands ready to assist Member States as they formulate and implement the
enabling policy and regulatory frameworks that are essential for such investment to take
place, and to continue to strengthen its work at the country level.
11. In the current fragmented system, institutional reform is unquestionably needed at
national, regional and international levels, to integrate the dimensions of sustainable
development, improve effectiveness in implementation, urgently scale-up activities, and
bring about further coordination and coherence of policy.
12. The UN system is determined to do its part on institutional reform, by improving systemwide
coordination mechanisms, and by reviewing and improving policies and
programmes, including through joint programming. But this may not be sufficient, and
Rio+20 should consider continued efforts on broader reforms within the UN system, for
example, the strengthening of institutions, mandates and regulatory frameworks, or
making structural changes.
13. At a more specific level, from a range of priority issues, a number have emerged that
warrant particular attention in the context of sustainable development at Rio+20.
Among these are: energy, water, oceans, green jobs, sustainable cities, sustainable
agriculture and food security, disaster risk reduction, and investing in health, education,
youth, gender equality and women?s empowerment.
14. These issues require a coordinated approach by the UN system, stakeholders from
government, civil society and the private sector, to find joint innovative and lasting
solutions. The organizations of the UN system have been intensifying efforts and
cooperation to address the challenges of the water, energy and global food security
crises. Rio+20 will provide an appropriate platform to support selected initiatives, such
as the Sustainable Energy for All initiative, which illustrate a collective renewed
commitment to sustainable development.
15. At Rio+20, we must build upon and scale up the achievements, best practices and
lessons of the MDGs, and lay strong foundations for the post-2015 development agenda.
We must chart a course for measurable progress towards sustainable development
goals, using milestones that integrate the economic, environmental and social
dimensions and a new generation of metrics to measure our achievements. The UN
system stands ready to support the world?s nations and peoples to make sustainable
development a reality.
Sustainable development and poverty
reduction: Decent work and green jobs in a
green economy
16. The ILO and its constituents, the governments, employers and workers of its 183
Member States, participated actively in the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 and
in the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002. The ILO has
anchored the vision of sustainable development as the overriding policy paradigm
within the Organization, and its agenda of creating decent work for all can make a key
contribution to development.
I. Renewed commitments, implementation gaps,
emerging issues
Renewed commitments
17. Productive employment and decent work play a pivotal role for sustainable
development and poverty reduction. Gainful employment creates wealth for families,
communities and national economies. Finding a job or starting a business are two of the
most important factors people in developing countries cite as the means by which they
have overcome poverty. The world of work plays a key role not only in the generation of
wealth, but also in its distribution and thus in equitable development, as well as in
shaping production and consumption patterns, reducing emissions, and managing
natural resources to ensure resource efficiency and recycling. It is in workplaces that the
social, economic and environmental dimensions come together inseparably. The world
of work can therefore inject essential impetus to the drive for an integrated approach to
sustainable development.
18. Previous conferences and summits have recognized the causal links between sustainable
development, employment and decent work. Agenda 21 calls for measures to promote
gainful employment to combat poverty. 1 The Johannesburg World Summit on
Sustainable Development went further and underscored the need to increase
employment and income opportunities. It emphasized the need for decent employment
that complies with fundamental international labour standards and for social dialogue as
part of the governance of sustainable development. 2 At its 2005 World Summit, and in
greater detail at the Economic and Social Council in July 2006, the United Nations and
the international system endorsed the ILO?s objective of decent work for all as an
internationally agreed development goal and a vital part of the international
development agenda that is indispensable for sustainable development. 3 This growing
emphasis on gainful employment and decent work is a reflection of large and widening
implementation gaps concerning the social dimension of sustainable development and
of the potential of the Decent Work Agenda to close these gaps. The call for a closer
linkage between social and environmental agendas is echoed in the UNFCCC agreements
reached in Cancun in 2010, recognizing that addressing climate change requires a
paradigm shift towards building a low-carbon society that offers substantial
opportunities and ensures continued high growth and sustainable development, based
on innovative technologies and more sustainable production and consumption
lifestyles, whiles ensuring a just transition of the workforce that creates decent work
and quality jobs.
Implementation gaps
19. Twenty years after the Earth Summit of 1992, the world is far from achieving sustainable
development. In spite of an unprecedented period of high and generalized economic
growth until 2008, gains in poverty reduction and employment have been modest
overall and concentrated in a limited number of countries.
20. Development over the last two decades has also seen the persistence of social exclusion
for large segments of the world?s population ?
· Global unemployment is at its highest point ever, surpassing 200 million worldwide;
in 2010 there were an estimated 476 million working poor 4 aged 15 years and
above ? more than 1 in 7 workers worldwide ? living with their families on less than
US$1.25 per person per day, and there are an estimated 942 million working poor ?
nearly 1 in 3 workers worldwide ? living below the US$2 a day poverty line. 5
· An estimated 5.1 billion people lack adequate social security or social protection
worldwide, while just over 15 per cent of the world?s unemployed worldwide are
receiving some form of unemployment benefits6.
· Most of the above problems are aggravated by a gender dimension: women
typically receive lower income for equal work7.
· Some 1.5 billion people continue to have no access to clean and modern forms of
energy, with serious negative impacts on health, education and economic
opportunity; in spite of the highest level of global energy consumption ever, this
number has remained unchanged for 20 years; more than a million people live in
slums without adequate shelter; more than one in six people worldwide ? 894
million ? do not have access to adequate amounts of safe freshwater8; 2.5 billion
people worldwide lack basic sanitation. Very often, these problems are
compounded by gender discrimination as women are often relegated to
employment of last resort, are subjected to the direct negative effects of having to
fetch water and gather biomass fuel, and are the main victims of the resulting
indoor air pollution.
21. In addition to the limited progress on the social pillar of sustainable development, there
has been a deterioration in the environment. Decoupling growth from the use of natural
resources and the generation of harmful emissions has been weak, resulting in major
increases in pollution and the overuse of many natural resources, including water, land,
fish and forests. Resource overuse, pollution and the impact of climate change affect the
world of work, disrupting economic activity, affecting employment and undermining
incomes and livelihoods. Poor countries and poor segments of the population are
disproportionately affected.
22. These outcomes demonstrate that the growth and development model of the last
decades has been inefficient. The lack of balance between the pillars in the growth
model translates into ever greater and unsustainable imbalances in outcomes.
Emerging issues
23. The existing imbalances have escalated in recent years. Inter-related crises have erupted
in finance, in economies, and in food security, exacerbated by natural disasters. Mass
unemployment and working poverty, particularly among youth, has reached
unprecedented levels and triggered social unrest. This has been most visible in North
Africa and the Middle East, where the employment-to-population ratio stood at 46.6
and 45.4 per cent respectively in 2010 (compared to a world average of 61.1 per cent),
meaning that out of 100 people that could work, not even half of them do. Levels of
unemployment stood at 9.8 per cent in North Africa and 10.1 per cent in the Middle East
in 2010, with high figures especially for women (15.0 and 17.0 per cent in North Africa
and the Middle East respectively, compared to a world average of 6.5 per cent).
Unemployment among Arab youth is among the highest in the world (23.6 per cent in
North Africa and 25.1 per cent in the Middle East, compared to a world average of 12.6
per cent). Young people?s risk of unemployment is four times higher than that for adults;
in Egypt this figure is six times bigger. 9
24. Over the last two decades pre-existing social inequality has deepened further and is
threatening social cohesion. The share of wages in total national income has been falling
and the income gap between the top and the bottom 10 per cent of wage earners
increased in 70 per cent of the countries for which data are available. 10
25. Demographic trends over the next few decades will bring major challenges for economic
development and the labour market. Some 450 million youth will enter the labour
market in the next ten years, adding to the existing backlog of unemployment and
underemployment. The biggest absolute challenges are faced in the Asia-Pacific region,
but the relative growth of employment opportunities needed is even higher in sub-
Saharan Africa and the Middle East.
26. The inter-related crises and their social and environmental repercussions demonstrate
how closely the three pillars of sustainable development are intertwined and how
rapidly the impacts are amplified and transmitted in a globalized world economy. Global
and national economic imbalances and social and environmental stresses exacerbate
each other, with the inevitable risk of a downward spiral.
27. The economic pillar, which has been prioritized at the expense of the social and
environmental pillars over the last few decades, has itself become a source of volatility
and destabilization. 11 The frequency and scale of economic and environmental shocks
are growing, with increasingly deep social impacts, in particular on poor segments of the
population. At the same time, economic crises are deviating resources away from
development, undermining investment in social and environmental improvement.
28. In view of the inefficiency of development over the past few decades and the risks and
challenges associated with the emerging trends, there is an urgent need to rethink the
development model and to redress the balance, recognizing that the three pillars are
equally important. A new development paradigm is needed which recognizes that the
quality of economic growth is as important as its quantity, and that economic policy
cannot be set independently of social and environmental outcomes. A more integrated
approach can harness the forces of globalization in ways that create positive links
between the three pillars.
Key messages concerning implementation gaps
The lack of decent work opportunities caused in large measure by
insufficient coherence between policies is a major challenge to achieve
sustainable development. At Rio+20 governments should commit to develop
mutually supportive economic, social and environmental policies for
employment generation and poverty eradication by promoting sustainable
enterprises and green jobs, and extending social protection whilst actively
engaging with workers? and employers? organizations.
II. Green Economy in the framework of sustainable
development and poverty eradication
Implications of the transition to a green economy for
employment, poverty and sustainable development
A green economy that delivers green jobs
29. The ILO and its constituents are convinced that a transition to a greener economy is
necessary for sustainable development in general and from a social and labour market
perspective in particular. A continuation of current trends under a business-as-usual
scenario will have increasingly negative impacts on labour markets and social
development.
30. While a green economy is unambiguously a necessary precondition for sustainable
development, it is not sufficient. A transformation towards greener economies offers
major opportunities for employment creation and social inclusion, but can also have
downsides from a labour market perspective. Greening alone will neither secure the
benefits, nor will it be sufficient to manage the potential downsides.
31. Evidence concerning the implications of a transition to a green economy for
employment, poverty and socially sustainable development from earlier and
forthcoming research by the ILO and others 12 shows that ?
· Employment balances in a green economy can be positive. Net gains in job
opportunities in the economy as a whole can make an appreciable contribution to
addressing the challenge of creating enough jobs, provided coherent policies are in
place. The gains will, however, not be sufficient to solve the employment problem,
and additional policy measures are needed.
· Job quality can improve in the transition to a greener economy. Such improvements
are often necessary to generate the economic and environmental benefits from
investments in greener production and consumption, but require conducive policies
and effective labour market institutions.
· The income effects of a transition and of the policy instruments used, such as
increases in the relative prices of energy and natural resources, tends to be
regressive and needs to be balanced through accompanying socioeconomic policies.
· There are numerous opportunities to achieve social inclusion on a very large scale as
part of a shift to a greener economy, including through access to energy-efficient
housing, renewable energy, sustainable agriculture and forestry, inclusive waste
management and recycling, but these synergies are only generated through
integrated policies and programmes.
· The transformation to a greener and more sustainable economy involves a
transition in labour markets, with major shifts of economic activity and of workers
within and between economic sectors. The downside of these shifts needs to be
managed to ensure a just transition for workers and enterprises that are negatively
affected, such as those losing jobs and business in industrialized countries from lowcarbon
strategies, and workers and enterprises in developing countries who need to
adapt to climate change in order to have sustainable livelihoods. Without targeted
policies for a just transition to stabilize incomes, diversify the economy, and provide
access to alternative opportunities and to the skills needed, the shift to a green
economy risks being delayed or blocked by those who perceive that they stand to
lose. Failure to adapt to climate change will seriously compromise the economic and
social sustainability of enterprises and employment.
32. In the light of these findings, a re-balancing of the growth model is urgently required,
ensuring equal weight is given to all three pillars when setting objectives and careful
consideration to the relationships between them when designing policies. Key issues for
the strengthening of the social pillar from the perspective of employment and income
include:
· greater efforts towards social inclusion
· conceptualizing and building social protection both as a buffer against shocks and a
stabilizer, in particular by providing a basic floor for livelihood security and targeted
social assistance for the most vulnerable
· greater attention to incomes and income distribution as a driver of balanced growth
· greater emphasis and higher evaluation of good job quality as a feature of
productive and gainful employment
· a better understanding of the transition, and better guidance on the structural
changes between sectors and within countries and their employment implications
· the need to create green jobs and green enterprises as a means of achieving higher
levels of sustainability, reaping a double or triple dividend.
The importance of social protection for sustainable development
33. Social protection needs to be recognized as an enabler of sustainable, inclusive growth
and as an economic stabilizer in the face of growing economic and environmental
shocks. Social protection shields people from destitution and poverty; it empowers them
to seize market opportunities; and it contributes to the stabilization of aggregate
demand. Countries that have introduced or expanded social protection schemes as part
of their development strategies are in a better position to cope with the social fallout of
economic and environmental crises. Over the last decade, many developing countries
have taken remarkable steps to expand coverage by basic health services and social
transfer programmes, laying the grounds for comprehensive social security systems, and
a social protection floor. 13 These programmes have been reinforced during the recent
economic crisis, and many governments have announced development plans that
include measures to broadly extend their schemes in the coming years. Social security
and economic diversification plans can help the adjustment of regions and sectors
(including SMEs) and vulnerable groups of workers affected by climate change and new
transformational policies.
34. At its 100th Session in June 2011 the International Labour Conference adopted a set of
Conclusions on social security. 14 These Conclusions represent a global tripartite
consensus on social security reached by the governments and employers? and workers?
representatives of the ILO?s 183 Member States. The Conclusions reaffirm that social
security is a human right, as well as a social and economic necessity for countries at all
levels of development. Recognizing the significant progress that many developing
countries have made in extending social security coverage during the last decade, the
Conclusions stipulate that closing social security coverage gaps is of the highest priority
for equitable economic growth, social cohesion and decent work for all women and
men.
35. The Conclusions call for the extension of social security in two dimensions: national
social security extension strategies should aim at achieving universal coverage with at
least minimum levels of protection (the horizontal dimension) and progressively
ensuring higher levels of protection guided by up-to-date ILO social security standards
(the vertical dimension). The horizontal dimension should aim at the rapid
implementation of national social protection floors that ensure that over their life-cycle
all in need can afford and have access to essential health care and enjoy income
security, at least at a nationally defined minimum level. Strong emphasis is being placed
on the fact that a one-size-fits-all approach is not appropriate. Countries should design
and implement their national social protection guarantees according to national
circumstances and priorities defined with the participation of social partners.
36. In June 2012 the International Labour Conference will discuss a possible
Recommendation on a Social Protection Floor. Complementing the existing ILO social
security standards, such a Recommendation would provide flexible but meaningful
guidance to Member States in building national social security floors within
comprehensive social security systems. Guiding national social security extension
strategies, such a Recommendation would also support national social, economic and
employment policy strategies, and contribute to poverty reduction and the
formalization of informal employment.
37. A Social Protection Floor (SPF) is fundamental to sustainable development as it entails
that citizens share life-cycle and market risks in a fair manner and allows workers and
communities to shift into new forms of sustainable economic activity without the fear of
falling into extreme poverty. The Global Social Protection Floor Initiative is a coherent
global social policy concept that promotes nationally defined strategies that protect a
minimum level of access to essential services and income security for all. It underpins a
broader social security system that caters to citizens of all levels of income. Accounting
for both demand and supply side measures, a national SPF is a basic set of rights and
transfers that enables and empowers in particular the poorest members of a society to
access a minimum of goods and services in the areas of health, water and sanitation and
housing, education, food and related information throughout their life-cycle.
Guaranteeing access to essential services and transfers that are part of the SPF
empowers people, economically and socially, to cope with the potential downsides of
the transition. It also helps redistribute income, thus addressing structural inequalities
that have both led to and reproduced unsustainable patterns of economic,
environmental and social development.
Creating employment and decent work in a green economy
38. Economic, environmental and social policies should focus growth on the creation of
decent work opportunities in sustainable enterprises in the real economy. Sustainable
enterprises are a principal source of growth, wealth creation, employment and decent
work, and safeguard the environment. 15 The promotion of sustainable enterprises is
hence a major vehicle for achieving sustainable development, innovation and decent
work. Entrepreneurship development and enterprise creation must be a key component
in national development strategies especially in countries with high rates of youth
unemployment. Central to the creation of sustainable enterprises is an enabling
environment that combines the legitimate quest for profit with the need for sustainable
development, which is development that respects human dignity and environmental
sustainability.
39. The transition to a greener economy should include both the creation of green jobs in
green sectors and the greening of enterprises across the economy. A green economy
cannot simply be achieved by green financial investments alone. A focus on green jobs,
i.e. jobs which reduce the environmental impact of enterprises and economic sectors to
sustainable levels while offering decent work ? helps realizing a structural transition
which enhances inclusion and equity. Clearly, without skilled workers, well-prepared
enterprises and motivated managers green technologies, for example, cannot be used at
all or not effectively. Similarly, multiple opportunities to reduce environmental impacts
through labour-management cooperation would be missed. The development of skills
for green jobs and a green economy, especially for youth, is an important and
indispensable part of the investment into a green economy and sustainable
development.
40. There is a growing body of experience showing how policies have been effective in
building on the synergies between a greener economy and the need to create more and
better jobs. This involves deliberate consideration and articulation of the three pillars of
sustainable development, which together provide a growing menu of policy options:
· Green social housing programmes in industrialized and emerging economies have
been effective in overcoming energy poverty and the lack of adequate shelter. Poor
households spend a disproportionate share of their income on energy, including that
spent on housing. Energy-efficient social housing and access to renewable sources of
energy can lead to substantial and lasting increases in the well-being and disposable
income of large numbers of poor households. In addition, new jobs and income are
generated through the development of local enterprises establishing and
maintaining energy infrastructure.
· Rural employment generation for poverty reduction can make a major contribution
to adapt and improve resilience to climate change, to improve rural economies and
increase food security by boosting agricultural productivity.
· Social protection linked to payment for environmental services can turn the direct
dependence of many poor people on natural resources into a means of reducing
poverty through the preservation or rehabilitation of the natural environment.
· Access to clean energy as an economic opportunity for the bottom billion can
provide large-scale employment and income opportunities in the deployment of the
technology and through the use of energy. Inclusive deployment based on viable
small and local enterprises is key to maximizing the benefits as they are providing
many job opportunities for women and youth.
· The inclusion of informal waste collectors into formalized waste management and
recycling value chains, including by promoting enterprise-based systems, can result
in improved livelihoods for tens of millions of women and men who are today in
precarious and hazardous employment, often below the poverty line.
· Well designed financial incentives for greening the economy can maximize
employment creation in green sectors and limit losses in energy and resource
intensive ones. Eco-taxes which raise the cost of energy and resource consumption
and use the added revenues to reduce the non-wage costs of labour, can lead to a
gain in employment, even in resource intensive sectors16.
· Seizing the huge opportunities for greening of enterprises by improving energy
efficiency, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, managing productive resources more
efficiently and reducing waste, whilst improving occupational safety and health for
workers and the environment for their families and communities.
· In order to manage transition in the labour market, strengthened social protection,
active labour market policies and economic diversification help to ensure socially
inclusive outcomes from the transition to a green economy and facilitate the
adaption to climate change and other environmental stresses. In this context, social
dialogue that involves employers, workers and governments is an effective way to
anticipate and manage restructuring and adaptation.
· Active labour market policies include retraining schemes for displaced workers, jobsearch
assistance, direct employment creation programmes, training programmes,
and employment subsidies to promote the hiring of vulnerable groups such as lowskilled
workers and new entrants to the labour force. Complementary measures can
include employment guarantee schemes deploying labour-intensive rural and urban
public works programmes and various forms of micro-credit schemes to promote
productive self-employment.
41. Policies for sustainable development and greening the economy should be anchored in
International Labour Standards, as they offer a normative framework and provide
practical guidance for an effective and socially fair transition for a green economy.
Key messages concerning a green economy in the framework of sustainable
development and poverty eradication
A transition to a green economy is a necessary precondition for sustainable
development in general and from a social and labour market perspective in
particular. Greening economies offers major opportunities for employment creation
and social inclusion, but it can also have downsides. To ensure that a green
economy is rich in employment, socially inclusive and fair, complementary social
and economic policies are needed along three lines:
I) Social protection as a means of social inclusion cushions the negative effects of
temporary and structural change in the move to a green economy; the extension of
social protection and the creation of a social protection floor for all are essential in a
transition to a green economy and for the adaptation to climate change as well as a
stabilizer in times of economic crisis. They are indispensable components of
sustainable development.
II) Entrepreneurship and sustainable enterprise development in green sectors with
high potential for job creation should be actively promoted, with a focus on youth
and women.
III) A just transition policy framework should be adopted for workers and
enterprises facing restructuring or having to adapt to climate change. This
framework complements access to social protection with economic diversification
and active labour market policies to facilitate adjustments through (re-) training,
skills upgrading for green jobs and enterprises, enabling technologies, employment
placement and, where necessary, targeted public employment schemes.
III. Institutional framework for a green economy
Mechanisms and institutions for policy coherence
42. The role of the institutional framework for sustainable development at international,
national and local level should be
a. to promote clear and achievable sustainable development objectives along
with a set of measurable targets and ensure balance between the three
pillars
b. to ensure policy coherence, including through ex-ante assessment of impacts
of policies on other pillars. Methods for conducting such assessments have
been developed for the green economy and the labour market.
c. to monitor progress in the three dimensions and their inter-actions.
43. The multipartite nature and modus operandi of the ILO17 could provide inspiration for
guidance for a comprehensive and effective governance system which embodies the
three dimensions of sustainable development and, at the same time, anchors its
normative work and policy guidance in the real economy
44. Participation by relevant stakeholders in the governance of sustainable development is
critical, as stressed in the Rio and Johannesburg Declarations. Given the pivotal role of
workplaces, enterprises and the world of work for sustainable development, this is
particularly true for employers? and workers? organizations as membership-based,
democratic representatives of the two key stakeholders in the real economy, which
should play an active role in the governance of sustainable development at all levels.
45. Social dialogue involving employers, workers and actors such as cooperatives, small
business associations, and representative member-based groups in the informal
economy such as waste workers? and street vendors? associations, is an effective way to
formulate policies that are well-informed, balanced and integrated. Building consensus
through social dialogue is also critical to ensure the commitment of all concerned and
the sustainability of policies. Social dialogue and tripartism are fundamental elements of
the ILO?s mandate, and have proven their value on numerous occasions. Most recently,
this has led to the adoption of the Global Jobs Pact, 18 which addresses the challenges of
the acute economic crisis in a constructive and coherent manner. The Pact has provided
an integrated approach linking macro-economic, trade, labour, rural development,
environmental and other policy fields, and has been used by many national policy
makers.
46. The national level is of critical importance for putting sustainable development into
practice. High-level consultative bodies such as national councils for social and economic
development have played a key role and should be strengthened. Similar institutions
should be created or strengthened at local and sectoral levels. Together with interministerial
mechanisms, such institutions of dialogue have been instrumental in the
formulation of integrated growth and poverty eradication strategies.
47. At the international level, relevant agencies should systematically conduct assessments
of their policies on all three pillars of sustainable development, in cooperation with the
relevant sectoral organizations, and should coordinate and where appropriate jointly
implement their policies. Promising recent examples of such inter-agency collaboration
include ILO-IMF collaboration for stronger links between growth strategies, fiscal
management and social protection, and the multi-agency partnership for the promotion
of a global social protection floor.
Key messages concerning the institutional framework for a green economy and
sustainable development
It is essential to ensure tripartite participation ? by governments, employers
and workers ? in international, national, sectoral and local governance
structures for sustainable development policy formulation and
implementation.
Governance structures need to achieve greater social equity, the creation of
quality employment opportunities, and a just transition for sustainable
development in a green economy. International labour standards provide an
important normative framework as well as practical guidance for the
formulation of relevant policies and for governance.
National goals should be set for sustainable development, including the
creation of green jobs and social inclusion through policies for the greening
of economies. These should be based on assessments of green jobs (current
and potential, including gender dimensions, working conditions and decent
work aspects) and translated through a process of social dialogue into
employment policies that are in harmony with sustainable development
policies.
Geneva, 1 November 2011.