The pandemic has exposed harsh new equalities warns ITUC

The pandemic has exposed tragic fault lines and new levels of inequality, said Sharan Burrow, general secretary, International Trade Union Confederation, speaking at FIS Maastricht on the eve of her departure from the organisation where she has been general secretary since 2012.

Fault lines visible in the number of informal workers and the loss of women from the workplace. While inflation in food and energy following in its wake has made life much more challenging for families, causing more inequality and poverty, and pushing back the transition, she said.

Burrow linked companies’ struggle for talent to a “broken” labour market. Over half of the global economy works in the informal sector, with another large proportion of the world’s workforce in insecure work.

“The world of work is not serving anyone well,” she said. In a new Social Contract, she outlined key demands for workers spanning jobs, rights, social protection, equality and inclusion.

Returning to full employment is key for people to trust economies and governments again. She stressed the importance of creating more jobs in sectors spanning care to green infrastructure and technology. Without this kind of investment, the divisions between nations will grow, and with it discontent. “Trust in democratic institutions is so low,” she warned.

Companies need to be prepared to pay minimum living wages to build confidence in the economy and to ensure people can afford to support themselves through increasing shocks, whether climate or health-related. She said that more than half the world’s population has no social protection.

Sponsored Content

Burrow also sounded the alarm on progress around diversity. Women have lost out during the pandemic and involuntarily left the labour force in a damaging development for women and the global economy. Elsewhere, she noted a rise in racism, made worse by the lack of policy around refugees and inclusion.

SDGs

Burrow said the world will only deliver on the SDGs with global cooperation. But she noted “low ambition” at COP27, particularly around developed countries paying for damages inflicted on the economies of poorer countries. “Countries are not serious about the notion of a Just Transition,” she said.

The SDGs represent solutions but require countries to put people and planet first. “We are creating the seeds of our own destruction,” she said, highlighting how some US investors now  “rage” against integrating ESG.

“What is it they value?” she asked, urging delegates to value people, homes and an economy wrapped in democracy that gives everyone a fair go in the world. She said leaders have made a promise to achieve net zero, but are now forgetting the commitments they made.

She highlighted the role of the union movement in supporting the SDGs, particularly around equality and inclusion. Creating a shared future of common security and prosperity involves including people, and the unions that represent them, in that vision.

She noted how union uptake in the US is at record lows; workers are bullied to not join unions and employers close down operations to avoid unionized workers.

“Companies will do anything to oppress workers and keep them poor; to not sit at the table and not work with them,” she said. She concluded that many CEOs are not aware of the conditions for workers making their products further down their supply chain in a “hidden workforce.”

 

Leave a Comment

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing has come a long way in the past two decades, going from a niche strategy to a $1.5 trillion industry, but there are still challenges for it to reach institutional scale due to the lack of products and insufficient evidence of outperformance in some parts of the market.

Sort content by

Reports of America’s decline greatly exaggerated: Kotkin

Reports of America’s decline as a geopolitical and economic power are exaggerated, and the noise investors should learn to ignore is really only the presidency itself, celebrated historian Stephen Kotkin told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Harvard.

Responsible investing remains ‘common sense’: MassPRIM chair

Trustee of Massachusetts PRIM and state Treasurer Deborah Goldberg said investing with a stewardship and sustainability-conscious approach remains “common sense” for the $116 billion fund, though she said it has been harder for the investor to access some ESG-related information from managers and companies.

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

The total portfolio approach has allowed Australia’s sovereign wealth fund to capture the themes that will power markets and economies for decades to come, said director of thought leadership Craig Thorburn – but that doesn’t mean it’s not hard to scale.

Crisis the real test of LP-GP relationships

When Blue Owl Capital came under sustained media pressure over redemptions to its private credit funds, Michael Hitchcock, chief executive of the South Carolina Retirement System Investment Commission (RSIC), didn’t waver. He thinks that what allocators learn from their managers in a period of crisis tells them more than any official due diligence could.

Fed independence a key US inflation variable: Former CEA chair

The path of US inflation hinges on the future of the Federal Reserve, with leading Harvard economist and former Obama administration Council of Economic Advisers chair Jason Furman warning that another variable for inflation is whether the central bank can remain independent.

Public equity manager challenges the case for private

Loomis Sayles’ Aziz Hamzaogullari has questioned whether asset allocators are giving private equity more credit than it is worth, saying the case for investing in PE rests on flawed return measurement, hidden risks and high fees and that public equities should be treated with the same “patience” that PE receives.