Salutation
"Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment,
to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against
unemployment. Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to
equal pay for equal work. Everyone who works has the right to just and
favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence
worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means
of social protection". (Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
Paris, 1948, Article 23)
The relationship between trade and decent work is an important element of the
current debate on the impact of trade and the labour market. What happens in the
labour market is important to trade. Nations trade for the benefits that will
accrue to their work force. Similarly, promoting decent work and improving
labour standards redound to the benefit of exporting enterprises.
Indeed, the system of agreements governing international trade is based on
the view that all countries and their citizens will derive benefits from
expanded trade. One of the reasons the idea of globalisation gives rise to fear
among some people is that it is believed that it may have an adverse effect on
wages and employment.
The debate about trade and the labour market, however, goes further than
wages. The final report of the World Commission on the Social Dimension of
Globalisation indicated that globalisation needed a parallel social track which
would sustain human values and enhance the well-being of peoples. It opined that
without such a social dimension, many would continue to view globalisation as a
new version of earlier forms of domination and exploitation.
In order to respond to the need to insert social ground rules in the
globalisation process the ILO in June 1998 unanimously adopted the ILO
Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and its Follow-Up.
The strength of this declaration lies in the fact that all members, even if
they have not ratified the ILO core conventions, on the basis of their
membership in the ILO, have an obligation to respect, to promote and to realise
the fundamental principles and rights relating to:
- freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to
collective bargaining;
- the elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labour;
- the effective abolition of child labour; and
- the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and
occupation.
In addition to this Declaration, the ILO also introduced the concept of
"decent work" to help us understand how labour market conditions can
be improved in a globalised market. This concept will be familiar to all of you,
but, briefly, "decent work" encompasses three dimensions:
1. The right to work, which implies the availability of productive and
sufficient work of acceptable quality which generates an adequate income;
2. Rights in work which include the right of everyone to the enjoyment
of just and favourable conditions of work, including fair wages, equal
remuneration for work of equal value, equal opportunities, safe and
healthy conditions of work, and reasonable hours of work and rest, as
well as the right to organize and bargain collectively. Exploitative work
such as child labour, bonded labour and other forms of slavery-like
practices are prohibited; and
3. The right to adequate social protection, which requires that well
designed and adequate social safety mechanisms be put in place for those
occasions when regular employment becomes unavailable.
Subsequent to the launch of the decent work agenda, the ILO on numerous
occasions noted that a decent work deficit exists in many countries and in many
regions.
The decent work deficit refers to the lack or absence of productive
employment opportunities, the lack of, or inadequate social protection
mechanisms, the non-compliance with or non-adherence to fundamental rights, and
the absence of structured social dialogue systems.
Despite the fact that trade agreements and trade policies affect all areas of
human activity and economic and social development, trade liberalisation has
been seen in a gender-neutral fashion and enough attention has not been paid to
the impact of trade liberalisation on gender inequalities and the impact of
gender inequalities on trade performance.
Nilufer Cagatay in her paper entitled "Gender, Poverty and Trade",
makes the point that mainstream economics literature is essentially gender-blind
when it comes to assessing the relationship between trade, on the one hand, and
inequality and poverty, on the other. She continues: "…most economists
acknowledge gender bias at the microeconomic level, for example, in the
operation of labour markets or in the allocation of resources within households.
But they often find it more difficult to see the relevance of gender at the
macroeconomic or global level".
Mariama Williams, in her paper: "A Strategic Approach to Gender,
Trade Agreements and Trade Policy" similarly makes the point that
gender biases in social employment relations and gender inequalities in
ownership, control, and access to economic resources such as land, credit, and
technical assistance play an important role in the multilateral trade system to
the detriment of women. However, the existence of these biases and constraints
does not seem to play a significant role in the formulation of trade negotiation
positions and trade policies."
The newly created UN Task Force on Gender and Trade is therefore a step in
the right direction. The Task Force will look at trade and trade policies on men
and women.
The key question to ask with respect to the trade-labour nexus is how can
trade liberalisation help to erase the decent work deficit, especially in light
of the fact that free trade does not automatically mean fair trade.
Member States of the Caribbean Community during the course of 2005 must
remove all existing restrictions on the right of establishment, the provision of
services, the movement of capital and the movement of selected skills in order
to establish the CARICOM Single Market by 31 December 2005.
Work on the CARICOM Single Economy will continue up to 2008 in accordance
with the decision taken at the Tenth Special Meeting of the Conference of Heads
of Government in November 2004 in Trinidad and Tobago.
In1989 the Conference of Heads of Government of the CARICOM Community took
cognisance of the fact that trade liberalisation alone was not sufficient for
small vulnerable states to survive in a global environment. In Grand Anse,
Grenada, therefore, the Heads decided to work expeditiously together to deepen
the integration process and strengthen the Caribbean Community in all of its
dimensions to respond to the challenges and opportunities presented by the
changes in the global economy.
The strengthening of the Community in all its dimensions, without a doubt,
also refers to the social dimension.
Indeed, the Caribbean Community, notwithstanding the fact that it was
initially created as a result of the desire of Member States to establish
trading links, from the onset catered for functional cooperation in the social
areas, including labour.
But more important, an integral part of the CARICOM Single Market is a
regional labour market since the free movement of skills and labour is now one
of the key pillars of the CSME.
The free movement of skills and labour gives CARICOM nationals, for five
selected categories at present, the right to move to that part of the single
economic space where the opportunities for productive employment, whether as a
wage earner or a non-wage earner, are the greatest.
In order to support this movement, the CARICOM Agreement on Social Security,
which came into effect on 1 April 1997, was put in place and successfully
implemented, now being operational in all Member States.
As far back as 1995, the Caribbean Community also adopted a Declaration on
Labour and Industrial Relations Principles, which highlights the labour
standards to which the Region aspires and, furthermore, serves as a guide to
enact harmonised labour legislation.
So far the Community has adopted four model labour laws, which were prepared
in cooperation with the ILO-Caribbean Office, namely:
- Termination of Employment;
- Non-discrimination and Equality in Employment;
- Recognition of Trade Unions and Employers' Organisations;
- Occupational Health, Safety and the Working Environment.
These model laws have been enacted to varying degrees in Member States;
Guyana has enacted all the laws, while other Member States have enacted one or
more.
With respect to labour standards, both the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas and
the Charter of Civil Society also call for the respect and adherence to labour
standards.
The Treaty even goes further by indicating in Article 226, which relates to
General Exceptions, that Member States have the right to adopt and enforce
measures relating to
- products of prison labour; and
- child labour.
Besides working on the internal liberalisation process, Member States of the
Caribbean Community are participating fully and effectively in the global
economic and trading systems by strengthening trading links with non-traditional
trading partners through a series of bilateral agreements, and taking part in
multilateral and other major trading negotiations.
The Community is or will be at the negotiating table at the World Trade
Organisation in order to implement the Doha Development Round, with the European
Union to decide on an Economic Partnership Agreement as called for by the
Cotonou Agreement, and with the rest of the Americas to create the Free Trade
Area of the Americas, once this derailed process comes back on stream.
Notwithstanding the progress that has been made over the years at the
regional level there is still much that needs to be done, particularly at the
national level.
In this regard, the Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD), which
has responsibility for all the social sectors including labour, will need to
place on its agenda ways and means of eliminating the decent work deficit in
Member States as well as policies to address gender inequalities, in close
collaboration with the ILO-Caribbean Office and our Regional social partners.
There is an urgent need to move the work in this area further along in order
to achieve the various key objectives of the Community, in particular the
objectives mentioned in the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas to which I alluded
earlier, namely improved living and working conditions and full employment, as
well as achievement of commitments made at the global and hemispheric levels,
such as poverty alleviation.
Although it is the primary responsibility of governments to uphold the right
of its citizens, employers, too, have to be held accountable for workers' rights
and have a major responsibility in creating a better social and economic
environment. At least one example of a working social partnership between
government, labour and the private sector exists in the Region and no doubt you
will be covering this in your discussions.
This workshop comes at a critical time and the labour issues it will address
are important if the country is to maximize its benefits from its international
trade agreements. I have pleasure in declaring this workshop open and wish you a
productive session.
Thank you