Rights Make Might: Ensuring Workers' Rights as a Strategy for Economic Growth
Author: J Bivens and C Weller
Date: 2003
Size:
7 pages
(93 KB)
Access full text: available online
Can workers' rights promote economic growth and stability? This paper from the Economic Policy Institute outlines the economic case for implementing the International Labour Organisation's five core labour standards (CLS). It argues that enforcing worker rights results in higher economic growth and a better distribution of income.
Global growth is currently sluggish due to too much global capacity. Firms have too few customers, and so increase profits by holding down wages and benefits and relocating to countries with lower labour standards. This ultimately leads to falling prices, and people shop or invest less as debts grow and profit opportunities vanish. The lack of customers is partly due to the erosion of labour rights. In Japan, for example, savings rates remain high as uncertainty over employment grows with the end of lifetime employment contracts. With fewer safeguards for workers, increasing unemployment and deflation have dampened consumption.
This is also true of emerging economies that have deregulated labour markets to appease International Financial Institutions. Increased labour market flexibility tends to lower labour income, dampening consumption. This in turn often exacerbates problems created by financial and economic crises, keeping economies from growing faster for long periods of time.
The bulk of economic research on worker rights shows that the implementation of CLS is associated with significant increases in economic growth.
Worker rights are not a luxury to be obtained after a certain threshold of development, but are crucial to starting on the path to strong and stable economic growth. Not only can they encourage economic growth, they can also distribute the benefits of growth more equally, and mitigate the effects of economic crises:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Bivens, J. and Weller, C., 2003, 'Rights Make Might: Ensuring Workers' Rights as a Strategy for Economic Growth', Economic Policy Institute, Washington, D.C.
Author:
Economic Policy Institute, http://www.epinet.org