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OECD: Rapid action needed to meet challenges of changing workplace

According to the OECD’s latest Employment Outlook 2019 [1], released April 2019 as part of the OECD’s Future of Work initiative, governments need to overhaul their approach to employment and jobs to reduce further social and economic tensions. Without rapid action, many people, particularly the low skilled, will be left behind.

Among the findings of the report:

The OECD recommends that countries focus on four key areas: labor protection, social protection, learning and social dialogue, and underlines the importance of ensuring adequate labor law protection for workers, regardless of their employment status. Governments should tackle false self-employment, which employers sometimes use to avoid taxes and regulations, minimize the “gray zone” between salaried work and self-employment, and extend rights to workers left in that zone.

According to the report:

Finally, union membership has steadily declined over the last three decades in OECD countries, falling from 30% in 1985 to 16% in 2016. This has weakened workers’ bargaining power and contributed to the decline in the share of national income going to workers. Membership is even lower among non-standard workers, who are 50% less likely than standard workers to be unionized. Access to collective bargaining and social dialogue should be extended beyond standard employment.

Download the entire report here. [2]