Ermu Notes
Ermu Notes
Ermu Notes
Decent work – framework developed by ILO which is the global, overarching body that
set global labour standards for UN member countries based on country specific context.
In 1999, they came with decent work framework, why? They felt that existing framework
was not working, things have gotten worse. We should go beyond that, beyond periphery
of premise of profitability and revenue into the ambit of decent work practices, decent
work is far more inclusive in that sense. There is more elements of societal needs,
whatever you provide as an employer to workers, this tends to get invested in larger
community. It impacts the economy
During the UN General Assembly in September 2015, decent work and the
four pillars of the Decent Work Agenda – employment creation, social
protection, rights at work, and social dialogue – became integral
elements of the new 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Goal 8 of
the 2030 Agenda calls for the promotion of sustained, inclusive and
sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent
work, and will be a key area of engagement for the ILO and its constituents.
Furthermore, key aspects of decent work are widely embedded in the
targets of many of the other 16 goals of the UN’s new development vision.
The ILO Framework Work Indicators covers ten substantive elements corresponding to the
four strategic pillars of the Decent Work Agenda (full and productive employment, rights at
work, social protection and the promotion of social dialogue), as following:
1. employment opportunities
9. social security
Not a minimum income, but fair income. ILO says that fair wages should do
justice to cost of living. Your workplace has to be secure, not just protection at work
but social protection. More social integration and not segregation, beyond
periphery of premise. Betterment for them as well as their families. Better
prospects for well-being. Give people to form associations, participate in decisions
which affect their lives. “The performance of enterprises of all sizes, and hence their
ability to create decent jobs and incomes for women and men, is inextricably linked to
the performance of the value chain they operate in.”
Africa full of minerals to be used in Iphone hence China needs it – close garden secrets.
Outcomes of value chain development – “To date, VCD has been used to improve
outcomes across all pillars of the Decent Work Agenda (Box 1), including areas such as
gender equality, productivity, skills and employability, youth employment, working
conditions and health and safety.”
4 PRINCIPLES
“There are four pillars of ILO’s Decent Work Agenda, with gender equality as a cross-
cutting theme
2 Rights at Work: Recognizing and respecting the rights of all workers, particularly
disadvantaged or poor workers who need representation and laws that work for their
interests.
3 Social Protection: Promoting both inclusion and productivity by ensuring that women
and men enjoy working conditions that are safe, allow adequate free time and rest, take
into account family and social values, provide for adequate compensation in case of lost
or reduced income, and permit access to adequate health care.
“Creating more equal opportunities for productive work for women and men
Increasing incomes
Providing better prospects for professional development (e.g. learning new skills)
Push incentives – where you find work practices are dismal, you levy fees
Modern Slavery – Domestic worker for 24 hours – classified as bonded labour or urban
modern slavery. Work at meager salary. Emile Durkheim the anomie – irregular
behavior, even in IT companies where they have to stay with the company and bond (not
a contract)
Environmental climate change – These issues also labour issues, floods submerged
houses
MARKET SYSTEM – “Simply put, a market system is all the actors and factors that
interact to shape the outcomes of an exchange” – forces of demand and supply,
economic system
“Strategy. Select sectors and the decent work focus, based on criteria of relevance,
feasibility and opportunity.
Analysis. Understand which aspects of the system are not working, moving from
visible ‘symptoms’ to the ‘causes’ which can often be found in underlying behaviours,
attitudes and enabling conditions.
Action. Facilitate change by building both the incentive and capacity of partners; which
involves a trial-and-error process to test new ways of working.”
MEASURING DEFICITS
‘Value Chain Development’ (VCD), in turn, refers to an approach which takes a product,
service or commodity as the basis for analysis.83 Understanding value chains helps
development practitioners identify those chains which are able to generate growth, job
creation and poverty reduction. It also aims to identify constraints to and opportunities
for increasing value chain performance, so that interventions can be designed and
implemented to address constraints and improve outcomes
Value chain development (VCD) looks at market dynamics and relationships between
different actors in the chain with the objective of strengthening the whole system:
Enterprises, business networks, supporting services and rules and regulations.
INCLUSIVE VALUE CHAIN - i.e. growth that is distributed fairly across society and
creates opportunities for all. If these constraints are not proactively addressed, the
outcomes for target groups could be negative rather than positive.
Supply chain Establishing backward linkages within the supply chain closer to raw
material source Channel Diversifying to new buyers or new geographic or product
markets
Product Shifting to more sophisticated products with higher unit prices Process
Reorganizing the production system or introducing new technologies to gain efficiency
CONCLUSION –
1. Start with a clear strategy that prioritises a limited set of impacts First, it is
important to have a clear target group focus.
2. Look below the surface to find the reasons for the decent work deficits Second,
during market systems analysis, the underlying reasons driving decent work
deficits may not be immediately obvious. The key is to spend time investigating
‘why’ before rushing in with a ‘solution’. For decent work, the challenge is often
not one of unemployment but underemployment. Analysis needs to focus not
only on the drivers of labour market exclusion, but to understand and address the
reasons why people are being adversely included.
3. Be adaptive and measure the meaningful Third, the reality of facilitating change
in market systems is more complex than simply implementing ‘blueprint’
interventions. Projects need to maintain a laser-sharp focus - only measuring
improvements in the decent work deficits they intend to address, while ensuring
that this does not come at the detriment of other aspects of decent work
. The term relations means interaction between people and groups based on attitudes of
the interacting people and groups. So the term industrial relations may be defined as the
sum total of management's attitude to labour and of the labour to management's
policies and practices and the positions the two take on different issues that affect their
interests.
dustrial relations in India do not fall into any known pure pattern — bipartit ism,
voluntarism, or tripartitism. They exhibit the characteristics of all the systems. Yet none
can emphatically say that they are progressive and conducive to achieve the objectives of
the industry and the economy.
Think of how the relationship between management of an organisation and the union of
employees undergoes changes. All industrial relations managers would have
experienced the ‘Form, Storm, Norm, Perform’ stages of building relations.
The union leadership realised that with establishments closing down like they
experienced in Akurdi
factory of Bajaj [you will recall that it was abruptly closed down] or downsizing
substantially, it was necessary to ensure that the workers’ families had a second source
of income. This led to VKKS actively training women family members to be self-
employed. Beginning was made with training a batch of 25 women and it was followed
by more batches. Reportedly many women so trained are earning a decent income
today. Their vision included among other things:
2. Empower women
Gig work, unlike traditional employment, allows workers to have more control over their
place of work, the kind of work they do, the hours they work, their role, their workload,
and their pay. It is particularly attractive to young people who seek more independence
and flexibility in their jobs, while also wanting to acquire new skills and access new
opportunities. A gig worker tends to have a more dynamic work profile.
1. As the report pointed out in an earlier section, precarity—in the sense of labour
and income insecurity, and the lack of work-based identity—has long featured
in the lives of a large proportion of Indian workers. It is not new, nor unique, to
platform work in India. The “gig” or “flexible” labels that are associated with
platform work may suggest that platform workers take on this work part time or
in addition to other work they undertake. However, workers were
overwhelmingly working full time on these platforms (with Dunzo, Housejoy, and
some occupations on Urban Company the exceptions) and were mainly
dependent on the platforms for their livelihood. Incentive amounts and offers
also change weekly, monthly and seasonally, and at short notice: food delivery
workers are offered incentives during festival seasons and cricket matches, but
they also vary for less predictable reasons such as the platform’s expansion into
new areas or investor pressure to stop cash burn.57 At any given time, incentive
offers also vary based on the worker’s registered geographical location within the
city.
2. Labour Insecurity and Precarity in Working Conditions
The platform economy as it is currently structured offers workers no job security
in the longer term and this presents a fundamental precarity in their work
(conditions). But conversations with workers revealed that they were not assured
of a job even in the shorter term, with workers on some platforms, including
Zomato, Ola and Uber complaining that they had experienced temporary ID
blocks and permanent suspensions without the means to appeal these decisions.
The growing automation and opacity of worker management systems further
complicates the process of redressal appeal. One of the benefits that is often
associated with working on platforms is the “flexibility.” It supposedly offers
workers the ability to choose when and how many hours they work for and when.
While some of the workers did mention this as an advantage, the interviews also
drive home the point that workers work unpredictable and long hours to achieve
an income that can sustain them. Most workers interviewed worked much longer
than the legally permissible 48 hourweek (without overtime wages). Moreover,
these hours were not always predictable and could also involve long periods of
waiting between orders
3. Lack of work-identity and precarity through contracting
In addition to the ambiguity of worker classification brought up earlier, there is a
further issue around contracts that emerges for platform workers. Increasingly,
components of the platform supply chain are being contracted out to entities
outside of the platform company. Furthermore, these subcontracting models are
still evolving (and rapidly so)
The production and distribution of goods and services have become ever more
complex. In the past, companies concentrated their output in specific countries
or regions. These days, it is spread across transnational global networks that aim
to maximize profit and minimize waste.
Global supply chains have transformed the world economy in the last three
decades. They have been an engine of growth and job creation, especially in the
developing world.