ILO: Indians can slip deeper into poverty due to Covid-19

ILO: Indians can slip deeper into poverty due to Covid-19

Relevance: Sociology: Poverty , deprivation and inequalities & G.S paper I: Society and Social Issues & G.S paper III: Indian Economy

From pandemics to poverty: the implications of coronavirus for the ...

 

CONTEXT

According to the ILO, around two billion people work informally around the globe, most of them in emerging and developing countries. According to this estimate, India accounts for 20 per cent of all the informal workers around the globe.

In fact, using the University of Oxford’s index, the ILO plotted a chart to show how India has put more informal workers under lockdown than its neighbour Pakistan and other countries such as Brazil and China.

ANALYSIS

The lockdown led a reverse migration with workers leaving cities back to their villages as industries were shut and paying off house rent or taking care of basic needs became a challenge, apart from health concerns. According to official estimates, 500,000-600,000 workers had to walk back home on foot as public transportation was not available to them.

They travelled miles on foot to reach their villages. Hundreds of thousands migrant workers are still living in shelter homes set up by various state governments in India, while the rest are under quarantine facility before they are allowed to meet their families.

In India, empirical evidences suggest that the unemployment rate, which was at a 45-year-high of 6.1 per cent in 2017-18, is already soaring. Though the official data is yet to be released, the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, a private agency which conducts regular job surveys, said that the unemployment rate touched at 23.4 per cent for the week ended April 5. The sample size was, however, low at 9,429 as conducting physical surveys became a challenge during the lockdown.

Around 400 million Indians are at a risk of slipping into poverty due to a “stringent” nationwide lockdown implemented to control coronavirus, International Labour Organisation (ILO) said in a recently released report.

“In India, Nigeria and Brazil, the number of workers in the informal economy affected by the lockdown and other containment measures is substantial. In India, with a share of almost 90 per cent of people working in the informal economy, about 400 million workers are at risk of falling deeper into poverty during the crisis,” the ILO said in its report on ‘COVID-19 and the world of work’.

It noted that India’s current lockdown measures were at the high end of an index produced by the University of Oxford, known as COVID-10 Government Response Stringency Index, which has impacted informal sector workers “significantly, forcing many of them to return to rural areas.”

ILO noted that lockdowns and related business disruptions have had sudden and drastic impacts on workers and enterprises.

ILO estimates show that workplace closures have increased so rapidly in recent weeks that 81 per cent of the global workforce lives in countries with mandatory or recommended closures.

The ILO estimates that the pandemic is expected to take away 195 million full-time jobs across the world. It said the employment losses are rising rapidly across the globe and described it as “the most severe crisis since the Second World War.

The sectors considered at high risk of disruption, according to the ILO, are accommodation and food service activities; manufacturing; real estate, business and administrative activities; and wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles.

Impacts

  • Pandemics can cause significant, widespread increases in morbidity and mortality and have disproportionately higher mortality impacts on LMICs.
  • Pandemics can cause economic damage through multiple channels, including short-term fiscal shocks and longer-term negative shocks to economic growth.
  • Individual behavioral changes, such as fear-induced aversion to workplaces and other public gathering places, are a primary cause of negative shocks to economic growth during pandemics.
  • Some pandemic mitigation measures can cause significant social and economic disruption.
  • In countries with weak institutions and legacies of political instability, pandemics can increase political stresses and tensions. In these contexts, outbreak response measures such as quarantines have sparked violence and tension between states and citizens.

Epidemics and pandemics can cause enormous economic damage as workers fall sick, fearful people avoid markets and public places, and quarantines and disease control measures reduce travel and clamp down on trade. Acute economic disruption carries particular risks for poor households, whose livelihoods are already precarious.

 

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