By - Press Release
Category - Lube Stickers
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Five years on from the onset of the financial crisis, unemployment
is on the rise again as economies around the world lose jobs and the
fragile recovery is threatened by "incoherent monetary policy" in the US
and Europe, said the ILO.
According to United Nation's agency's latest report, Global Employment
Trends 2013, 6% of the world's workforce were without a job in 2012.
The number of jobless people around the world rose by 4m in 2012 to
197m. Young people were the worst affected: nearly 13% of those under 24
were unemployed. Some 35% of all young unemployed people have been out
of work for six months or longer in advanced economies, up from 28.5% in
2007.
"This is a massive waste of the lives of young people and
their talents and extraordinarily damaging to the people themselves and
their societies even if stability were not to be affected," said ILO
chief Guy Ryder.
The situation is being exacerbated by "incoherent monetary policy," in the world's largest economies (the G20),
said the ILO. "In comparison with the crisis years of 2008 and 2009,
the stance of monetary and fiscal policies in G20 countries has lost
coherence, thereby increasing uncertainty and limiting policy
effectiveness to support the recovery," said the report.
The global economy
is expected to show a modest gain in 2013, with output up 3.6% compared
to 3.3% in 2012, according to the International Monetary Fund. But this
fragile recovery is threatened by political uncertainty on both sides
of the Atlantic that threatens recovery worldwide, said the ILO.
In the US, the recovery is being challenged by negotiations over the debt ceiling, and spending cuts associated with the fiscal cliff.
In Europe, a modest recovery is dependent on the ability of political
leaders to "establish credible policies to promote fiscal integration of
Euro-area economies".
"Incoherence between monetary and fiscal
policies adopted in different countries and a piecemeal approach to
financial sector and sovereign debt problems, in particular in the euro
area, have led to uncertainty weighing on the global outlook," said the
report.
"Investment has not yet recovered to pre-crisis levels in
many countries. The indecision of policymakers in several countries has
led to uncertainty about future conditions, and reinforced corporate
tendencies to increase cash holdings or pay dividends rather than expand
capacity and hire new workers."
The world's advanced economies
were the epicenter for the financial crisis and have been the hardest
hit, accounting for half of the total increase in unemployment of 28
million since the onset of the crisis.
But developing economies
are now being hit by the double dip in some of the world's advanced
economies, said the ILO. Advanced economies lost another 1m jobs in
2012, while 3m were lost in other regions, especially hard hit were east
Asia, south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
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