ILO forum call for integrating sustainable development, work
The Director-General of the International Labour Organization Juan
Somavia called on delegates at an ILO Asian Forum on Growth, Employment
and Decent Work to forge policies aimed at creating a new paradigm
“integrating sustainable development and decent work”.
In his address, Somavia told delegates from 20 countries attending
the Forum “We meet at a moment when Asia is contributing to shaping a
new world economy. Asia is moving in ways that are not only impressive,
but unprecedented. You are exercising new forms of leadership in this
truly Asian century.”
In addition to the tripartite membership of the ILO, the meeting
included representatives of finance and planning ministries, academics,
and non-government organizations.
Somavia said that despite unprecedented economic growth, “we’re not
seeing jobless growth, but job-weak growth.
This is not politically sustainable over the long run because
underlying it all are different forms of social tensions already
expressing themselves in different ways.”
Saying he believed a “paradigm shift” was under way “for a
sustainable development approach to growth”, he called for
“sustainability as a development objective.”
The Forum also heard welcoming addresses from Hua Jianmin,
Secretary-General, State Council of China and Tian Chengping, Minister
of Labour and Social Security of China.
Hua Jianmin listed policy measures taken by the Government to promote
employment, adding he hoped the Forum would serve as a “platform for
expanding common ground, sharing best practices and enhancing
cooperation in our common endeavour to ensure economic growth,
employment creation and decent work.”
Tian Chengping, in his address, said over the past few years China
had “achieved remarkable progress in increasing employment and realizing
decent work.” He pledged stepped up efforts to “give priority to the
development of harmonious work relations and safeguard workers’ legal
rights and interests in earnest so as to realize decent work.”
“There is no single Asian strategy,” Mr. Somavia said. “But there are
commonalities. The time has come to strive for a social floor in every
country according to its means, pursued as a systematic national and
international development objective to expand the security of its
people.” |