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Senior World Bank official says LAC needs more and better jobs
World Bank Regional Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), Carlos Felipe Jaramillo
COVID-19, Latest News, News
September 28, 2020

Senior World Bank official says LAC needs more and better jobs

WASHINGTON, United States (CMC) — The World Bank Regional Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, today said the challenge facing the region is the creation of more and better jobs in the era of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

He said the LAC is the region most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in the world, with a health impact as strong as that of advanced countries, but without comparable means to mitigate the effect on economic activity and employment.

“It is a complex, painful scenario in which millions of people suffer daily the difficulties facing the region and their devastating consequences on the world of work,” Jaramillo said, noting that informal workers have been the most affected.

He said with quarantines keeping them from going out, they cannot earn income for their families, and because they are not covered by unemployment insurance and other social programmes, it is difficult to help them.

“Formal employment has resisted better so far, but these jobs will likely be heavily affected in the coming months as companies’ liquidity problems become solvency problems and many will be forced to close.”

But he stressed that the LAC cannot overcome these difficulties by returning to the past.

He said the World Bank report titled “Going Viral: COVID-19 and the Accelerated Transformation of Jobs in Latin America and the Caribbean”, demonstrates that in the region, employment in the industrial sector stagnated at levels below those of advanced economies and emerging economies of East Asia.

“It also shows that most employment is concentrated in the service sector, which is typically more informal and has higher self-employment rates. The technological revolution has accentuated these trends. With respect to the pandemic, the need to adopt digital platforms that reduce social interaction is widening the gap between those who can telework and those who cannot.”

Jaramillo argues that the creation of more and better jobs is vital for the region, adding that it is crucial to invest in creating the human capital necessary for the jobs of the future, which will be less routine and simple.

“Education and vocational training programmes create opportunities and should be within everyone’s reach. The countries of Latin America and the Caribbean should work to increase the market value of education if they strive to keep up with the most advanced economies. Additionally, they should promote training and labour re-entry programmes for adults,” he said.

“In addition to supporting the health response, social containment and economic recovery in 17 countries of the region during the COVID-19 emergency, the World Bank approved several programmes to create human capital this year.

Jaramillo said boosting productivity is equally important. The productivity index for the region’s agricultural sector is an average of 20 per cent lower than that of the United States.

“It is 40 per cent lower in industry and 25 per cent lower in services. Improving efficiency in these three areas will require incorporating technology; stimulating innovation, competition and quality; eliminating market distortions that impede the growth of the most productive firms; removing trade barriers; and advancing international agreements that facilitate exchange. The region’s potential is enormous but will only materialize if we apply the appropriate policies.”

The report also underscores the need to rethink labour regulations in a way that promotes job creation and the formalization of employment. It is necessary to expand employment, but in a way in which social protection benefits reach larger segments of the population.

Jaramillo said governments can also improve the business climate to attract investment and develop communications, transport and logistics infrastructure to drive business growth. The World Bank will help implement these much-needed changes.

“Additionally, the jobs of the future may be conditioned by technological advances associated with the so-called fourth industrial revolution. We still do not know how innovations such as artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things and 3D printing will impact the labour market.

“Historically, despite potential initial fears, new technologies have supported increased job creation, higher productivity and improved quality of life. The region has the opportunity to be at the forefront of this revolution and to reap its benefits.”

Jaramillo said one of the LAC’s greatest challenges — perhaps the biggest — is to create new sources of employment in the current environment of sectoral changes and technological development.

“The enormous economic and social costs of the pandemic have accelerated the transformation of the labour market and have made addressing this challenge even more urgent. But the path to inclusion through employment is inescapable if we want more equitable societies. That will be the measure of success,” Jaramillo said.

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