Media Advisory: ILO to publish first global survey of economic insecurity

A new ILO study covering 90 countries world wide reveals that the vast majority of the global workforce today lives in a world marked by economic uncertainty and insecurity over the future.

Press release | GENEVE | 26 August 2004

GENEVA (ILO News) – The vast majority of the global workforce today lives in a world marked by economic uncertainty and insecurity over the future, says a new study to be published by the International Labour Office (ILO) on 1 September 2004.

The study, entitled “Economic Security for a Better World” attempts for the first time to measure social and economic security of individuals as well as economies in some 90 countries representing over 85 percent of the world’s population.

Among the elements of the study are the impact of globalization and employment policies—including outsourcing—on individuals as well as states, an analysis of the needs and aspirations of individuals in the world of work and whether people are happy or unhappy with their jobs, the impact of poverty and development on human security, and the extent of economic and social risk to which people are being increasingly exposed in their societies.

The report also contains a measure of Economic Security for the 90 countries surveyed in terms of labour market, skills, work and income security as well as employment protection and their access to representation.

Coming shortly after the report of the World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization, the study is designed to enrich the global debate on how to improve peoples’ social and economic security.

The report will be published as at 1300 GMT on 1 September 2004. Press conferences will be held in Geneva , Switzerland on 31 August and in London on 1 September. Reports and press materials will be available from other ILO offices worldwide.

For further information, or to receive a printed, electronic or web-based copy of the report, please contact:
Krisdaporn Singhaseni
ILO-Bangkok
Tel: +66 2288 1664
Email