Global crisis engulfs all workers

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Global crisis engulfs all workers
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Ocak 26, 2009 00:00

PARIS - The global financial crisis has sent a wave of rising unemployment across the world as vulnerable workers suffer from the downturn in economies interlinked by globalization, experts say.

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The U.S.-born credit crisis that worsened in September has also seen a harsh economic slowdown, with several of the richest countries Ğ including Germany, Japan and Britain - sinking into recession.

Shockwaves from the general decline in activity have reached worldwide, hurting poorer countries whose exports or highly mobile migrant workers have fuelled their recent growth.

Employees all around the world effected
Trouble that hit banks in rich countries has now spread to affect workers, "including in countries that had not committed financial excesses," Raymond Torres, director of the International Institute for Labour Studies of the International Labour Organization, or ILO, told Agence France-Presse.

"Apart from the countries directly involved in the financial crisis and those that were already in an economic slowdown, the phenomenon is now hitting countries that are dependent on others through exports, such as China, and through migrant workers, such as Mexico," he said.

Unemployment is soaring fastest in countries with a highly mobile workforce, sharpening social inequalities at the expense of vulnerable younger or older employees, migrants or those relying on temporary work, experts say.

In China, six million migrants have lost their jobs because of the crisis, according to official data released Thursday. Many of them left their rural homes for jobs in the big eastern cities, but now find factory gates shut. In 2007 the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD, a grouping of 30 richer countries, recorded its lowest jobless rate in nearly 30 years - 5.6 percent. But in just a year, the job market has plunged. The OECD and ILO now estimate that the ranks of the jobless worldwide could grow by up to 25 million by next year, possibly reaching a record of 210 million by the end of 2009.

Slashing jobs
From giant carmakers such as Toyota to technology firms such as Microsoft and the Swiss banking titan UBS, employers around the world have announced job cuts by the thousands.

Britain, which on Friday confirmed that it had entered recession, is seeing its highest unemployment rate for 10 years, with younger workers among those most affected.

Spain's unemployment rate surged to a massive 13.91 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008, that national statistics body said on Friday, after years of construction-fuelled growth had driven the rate down.

The United States lost 2.6 million jobs in 2008, according to official figures - the worst year for employment since 1945, with the manufacturing, auto and service sectors particularly hard hit.

Japanese companies have announced thousands of lay-offs in recent weeks among contract or temporary employees -- many of them migrant workers from Brazil.

A Japanese government survey last month said that more than 85,000 temporary workers have lost or know they will lose their jobs by March. "In countries with lots of less secure working contracts, unemployment spreads quicker." said an expert from the ILO. "A rise in unemployment of this size is going to touch the globe, but it is the most vulnerable, the young or the less qualified, who will find it hardest to find a decent job after the crisis."

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