Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Bahana Penggangguran

Trend global semasa menunjukkan 40 juta rakyat bakal hilang pekerjaan menjelang akhir tahun 2009. Ini menjadikan angka penggangguran mencecah 230 juta akhir tahun ini.

Pertubuhan Buruh Antarabangsa (ILO) menjangkakan pertumbuhan ekonomi dunia akan semakin perlahan dan ekonomi global dijangka pulih menjelang 2010.

Di Malaysia, 10,000 orang telah hilang pekerjaan sejak Januari 2009. Menurut Persekutuan Majikan Malaysia (MEF), keadaan menjadi lebih buruk apabila 600,000 guna tenaga baru memasuki pasaran kerja setiap tahun.

Ke mana haluan bakal graduan kita nanti? Apa akan jadi pada pekerja yang hilang mata pencarian mereka?

Sehingga kini, terdapat 1.5 hingga 2 juta pekerja asing masih membanjiri negara ini.

World unemployment could rise by 40 million

GENEVA, Jan 28 — The global economic downturn could see 40 million more people lose their jobs by the end of the year, taking the unemployment rate to its highest in a decade, the UN labour agency said today.

The number of unemployed in 2009 will largely depend on how effective governments’ economic stimulus measures are, the International Labour Organization (ILO) cautioned.

Worldwide unemployment by the end of the year will range between 210 million and 230 million people, the agency said in its annual Global Employment Trends report.

That is a marked increase on the 179 million who were unemployed at the end of 2007 and the estimated 190 million at the end of 2008, the ILO said.

The worst case scenario assumes growth slows rapidly and that an economic recovery will be delayed into 2010.

This would boost the global unemployment rate to 7.1 per cent, a decade high and well above the 2007 rate of 5.7 per cent and estimates for a 2008 rate of six per cent. Over the last ten years, the rate has ranged from 5.7 per cent to a peak of 6.3 in 2003 and 2004.

ILO Director-General Juan Somavia said that although many governments have started to support their economies, “more decisive and coordinated international action is needed to avert a global social recession.”

“Progress in poverty reduction is unravelling and middle classes worldwide are weakening,” he said.

The latest predictions are based on an economic growth forecast of 2.2 per cent, published by the International Monetary Fund in November and expected to be adjusted downwards.

“Unemployment will rise with a downward revision, but I believe it will still fall within the range,” said Lawrence J. Johnson, who heads the ILO’s employment trends unit.

The report had originally forecast world unemployment would range between 198 million and 230 million people, but Somavia said the lowest estimate has probably been overtaken by events.

If the worst case scenario materialises, around 200 million more people would become working poor — unable to earn more than US$2 (RM7.20) per person a day.

In this outlook, the total number of working poor would be 812 million, or 26.8 per cent of the world’s work force, the report said, using poverty estimates by the World Bank.

In 2007, some 609.5 million were working poor — 20.6 percent of the world’s work force at the time.

In addition to fiscal and monetary interventions, the world economy also needs creative measures improving the social situation of workers, the report said.

“There is a need to focus measures on vulnerable groups in the labour market, such as youth and women, who are most likely to be pushed into poverty and find themselves trapped there for many years,” it said.

Governments should give special attention to small and medium companies because they provide the bulk of jobs and are most affected by the financial crisis, the report said. — AP