ej es g8 gf sd


TUAC/ ITUC Assessment of the G20 Finance and Labour Ministers Meetings 2013
18-19 July 2013, Moscow

23/07/2013

Downloads

  • ITUC/TUAC Evaluation of the G20 July Moscow Meetingspdf

The Labour20 (L20) Summit in Moscow was held against the background of gloomy, downward revised growth and employment forecasts as evidenced by the OECD/ ILO joint unemployment projections  that were disclosed before the G20 Ministerial Meetings. Trade Union representatives acknowledge the broader messages of the G20 Joint Labour and Employment and Finance Ministers' Communiqué and the Labour and Employment Ministers' Declaration with regard to the support for aggregate demand, investment in jobs and social policies, social protection, minimum wages, and collective bargaining "to reinforce the links between productivity, wages and employment" (#8.5 of the Joint Communiqué).

However, this change of tone needs to be followed up with strong commitments and policy action, including a comprehensive G20 Jobs Plan, at the St. Petersburg G20 Leaders Summit on 5-6 September. G20 Leaders have to take this opportunity to give back confidence and hope to working families that were hit hard by the global economic crisis and continue suffering under current policies. At present, these messages are in sharp contrast to recent austerity policies and calls for labour market deregulation, particularly promoted by the Troika in the European Union. The L20 delegation to the social partner consultations with Labour Ministers raised these concerns and conveyed its key messages. The B20 and L20 also released a Joint Statement and Letter to Ministers, which urged governments to scale-up quality apprenticeships.