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The G20 and the COVID-19 pandemic

Global action to beat COVID-19 crisis vital to prevent employment disaster, ILO tells G20 ministers

More needs to be done to protect workers and support businesses, particularly in low and middle income countries, the ILO Director-General has told labour ministers.

Press release | 23 April 2020
Volunteers delivering humanitarian aid to poor and large families in Kyrgyzstan
© Vyacheslav Oseledko / AFP
GENEVA (ILO News) – The Director-General of the International Labour Organization (ILO), Guy Ryder, has welcomed the G20 Labour and Employment Ministers’ commitment for “full global cooperation” to safeguard people’s jobs and incomes, but warned that current support measures are not enough.

“As the crisis spreads to low and middle income countries we will need to do much more to protect workers and support enterprises, because these countries are less prepared for a protracted crisis. Otherwise, the combination of large informal economies and low social protection coverage will spell disaster for people and economies,” Ryder said.

As the crisis spreads to low and middle income countries we will need to do much more to protect workers and support enterprises."

Guy Ryder
“Our aim should be to help these countries support their people, weather the crisis, and to build back better. We need global solidarity to support investment in these economies, in their social and environmental renewal, in their people and in the institutions of work that will effectively protect workers and their families. If not, the already large inequalities will widen, poverty will deepen, social progress will be lost and the path towards recovery will be very hazardous,” he added.

In a statement issued after their virtual Extraordinary Meeting on April 23, the G20 Ministers committed themselves to take “in full global cooperation…a human-centred approach to promote employment, bolster social protection, stabilize labour relations and promote the Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.”

Respecting workers’ fundamental rights and effective dialogue with workers’ and employers’ organizations is the only way to create a solid, equitable, global recovery, and ensure the public support needed to carry the measures through."

Guy Ryder
After making his presentation to the meeting, Ryder welcomed the Ministers’ endorsement of the importance of social dialogue in creating appropriate, responsive and durable solutions to the pandemic.

“Respecting workers’ fundamental rights and effective dialogue with workers’ and employers’ organizations is the only way to create a solid, equitable, global recovery, and ensure the public support needed to carry the measures through,” he said.

The ILO has proposed an integrated, four pillar policy response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This includes support for the economy and employment; support for enterprises, jobs and incomes; protection for those working during lockdowns and as economies reopen, and the use of social dialogue.