ILO Dir.-Gen. Advocates for a People-Centric Approach in Post-COVID-19 Recovery

Rehabilitation

Posted by AI on 2025-08-26 08:45:36 | Last Updated by AI on 2025-08-26 11:15:34

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ILO Dir.-Gen. Advocates for a People-Centric Approach in Post-COVID-19 Recovery

Amid the devastating impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global labor market, the International Labour Organization (ILO) held a virtual Global Forum to discuss concrete actions to put impacted people at the center of recovery efforts. The high-level forum, held from 22 to 24 February 2022, brought together key stakeholders, including Heads of State and Government, heads of international organizations and multilateral development banks, and employers and workers leaders, to examine actions needed to promote decent jobs, inclusive economic growth, universal social protection, sustainable enterprises, and a just transition towards a carbon-neutral global economy.

The ILO estimates that the crisis has disrupted the world of work to the extent of 52 million full-time jobs. The pandemic has also deepened inequality and poverty, especially among the most vulnerable groups, including those in the informal economy, women, and young people. The ILO aims to ensure that the world of work emerges stronger from the crisis through a broad-based labor market recovery based on the principles of decent work. This includes health and safety, equity, social protection, and social dialogue.

The forum also addressed the Global Accelerator on Jobs and Social Protection for a Just Transition, aiming to generate investments and resources required to create at least 400 million new jobs, extend social protection floors to those without access, and scale up climate action for jobs. The ILO believes that building back better systems that are safer, fairer, and more sustainable will require global solidarity and a commitment to protect everyone, especially the most vulnerable. Finally, the ILO believes that this crisis presents an opportunity to advance a more networked, inclusive, and effective multilateralism to increase the coherence of the international response to the pandemic's profoundly unequal impact on people.

The writer concludes by emphasizing the need for a people-centric approach to recover from the COVID-19 crisis and urging stakeholders to capitalize on the forum's findings to create a more inclusive and sustainable future.

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