office support to constituents to give effect to the global jobs pact at the national-level special...
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Office support to constituents to give effect to the Global Jobs Pact at the
national-levelSpecial Assignment No: 1
GJP Learning Event December 14, 2011
Geneva
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« Ensure sound and integrated technical support to the operational response to constituents in countries wanting to apply Global Jobs Pact’s policies. This entails strategic and effective coordination of policies and tools, mobilizing the knowledge and technical capacities from across technical sectors and departments, and complementing the technical capacity of the regions in the delivery of assistance to constituents at the country level, under the authority of Regional Directors »
Source: DG Announcement, 6 Nov 2009. « Special Office Arrangements to support ILO Constituents to give effect to the GJP ».
Assignment 1 of Special Office Arrangements:
Assignment developed two streams of activities
I. Mobilizing knowledge from across technical sectors and departments in a distilled user friendly way:
Updating the crisis policy inventory for 54 countries Partnership with the World Bank for crisis policy inventory and
for collaboration on research and impact assessment Expanded capacity building, knowledge sharing and training
activities – including resource mobilization to these ends. Series of GJP Policy Briefs
II. Support to constituents at the national level in particular in those countries that want to use the GJP in an integrated way
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Office strategy to support constituents for national implementation of GJP takes place at two levels:
A. Mainstream GJP implementation in P&B and DWCPs (Office-wide responsibility, not just Assignment 1)– Outcome Coordinators were required to take account of the
Global Jobs Pact in their strategies– Outcome Based work plans were adjusted to provide the
support requested in Country Priority Outcomes
B. Support to National Implementation in countries committed to an integrated application of the GJP (Focus of Assignment 1)
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What is a Scan? Uses the full framework provided by the GJP Provides an integrated analysis of policies using the GJP portfolio
How is it produced? Office’s multi-disciplinary teams Constituents are consulted during its preparation Before it is published it is widely circulated across the Office
How is it used? Made available to constituents as a contribution to their national
policy dialogue and policy-setting processes In capacity building activities and as a knowledge sharing tool As an input to the development of DWCPs and Outcome-Based
work plans
B. Support to countries committed to an integrated application: GJP Scan Methodology
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The GJP Country Scans methodologyComponents of the Approach
1. Product: Global Jobs Pact Country Scan – input to national social dialogue on crisis response
2. Country selection: criteria in line with GB guidance, consultations with social partners were the basis for final decision.
3. Working Methods: Multi-disciplinary teams and HQs Field Coordination Management
4. Capacity building for constituents and support to national policy dialogue
5. Process at country level: Social Dialogue and consultations to produce Priority Roadmaps for action, influenced by scan
6. Follow-up technical support mainstreamed into the DWCP and Outcome-based Work plans
PART 1
PART 2
PART 3
a broad description of what is known at country level about impact of the crisis
overview of most important policy responses
recommendations on how national policies can contribute to shaping fair and sustainable globalization
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1. The product: A GJP country scan is a document with three well defined parts:
Why?
How?
• To have an integrated situation analysis using the GJP policy portfolio to improve crisis response policies
• To enable an integrated approach that takes account of the integrated, interdependent and mutually supportive elements of policies under a decent work lens - as requested by SJD
• To contribute to well informed social dialogue and policy prioritization by constituents
• A new knowledge product that fills a gap in policy analysis
• Office document: it is a document under the responsibility of the Office, not a negotiated document.
• Standardized methodology: it is a structured, systematic and integrated approach, using a questionnaire/checklist and a common diagnostic format for all countries
• Multi disciplinary teams are established with Office specialists from Field and HQs in all relevant areas
• An input for tripartite dialogue and priority setting
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1. Why a scan and how does it work
• Summarizes key information about impact of crisis on real economy, employment and labour market
• Provides the contextual background against which policy mapping should be interpreted, using statistics and other data
• Has 5 subsectionsImpact on macroeconomic variablesImpact on the real economy, key sectors, regional differencesImpact on labour market and employmentImpact on systems for social protectionImpact on labour standards
• What knowledge gaps?
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What is in a GJP scan - part 1
1. Did country start, expand or modify policies or measures in that particular area?
2. What Quantitative and qualitative impact of the measure (s)? Debate on effectiveness?
3. What support by international organization(s) for implementation of the measure?
4. Has ILO been involved?
5. Is there further interest for ILO involvement and support?
What is in a GJP scan - part 2Uses the Global Jobs Pact as organizing framework for a diagnosis of policies
4 policy areas, broken down into specific sub-areas
• Accelerating employment creation, jobs recovery and sustaining enterprises
• Building social protection systems and protecting people
• Strengthening respect for ILS
• Social dialogue; bargaining collectively, identifying priorities, stimulating action
5 generic questions for each sub-area
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• A clear request for assistance from a member state interested in applying the GJP in an integrated manner
• A strong commitment to genuine tripartite social dialogue
• Agreement that the ILO will undertake an integrated review
• Commitment to a national tripartite policy dialogue that results in a well prioritized roadmap for additional national policy responses and potential additional ILO support
2. Country selection criteria
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3. Multidisciplinary Teams and HQs-Field Coordination Management
Region Regional Director
Country (Lead Executive Director, Lead Technical Coordinators)
AFRICACharles Dan
South Africa (José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs), Lead TCs: Vic van Vuuren; Susan Hayter
Nigeria(José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs), Lead TC: Sina Chuma; Azita Berar
Mali(Assane Diop), Lead TCs: Francois Murangira; Michael Gautrey
LATIN AMERICAJean Maninat
Argentina(Guy Ryder); Lead TC: Marcelo Castro; Mito Tsukamoto.
El Salvador (José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs); Lead TCs: Virgilio Levaggi; Mario Berrios
EUROPESusanne Hoffmann
Bulgaria(Kari Tapiola); Lead TCs: Mark Levin; Maoazam Mahmood
ARAB STATESNada Al-Nashif
Jordan (George Dragnich); Lead TCs: Maurizio Bussi; Azita Berar
ASIA PACIFICSachiko Yamamoto
Indonesia: Lead TCs: Peter van Rooij; Claudia CoenjaertsMongolia: Lead TCs: Anne Herbert; Per Ronnas
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For employers’ & workers’ organizationsEnhance understanding of policy optionsDevelop and articulate policy position Participate in policy design, implementation and
monitoring
For policy makers, planners, government officials and development agencies
Policy design Policy implementation and monitoring
4. Capacity building for constituents
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• Indonesia: Indonesia Jobs Pact; led
to the application of the Dynamic Social
Accounting Matrix to asses the employment
impact of the infrastructure component of their
stimulus package • El Salvador: National Jobs Pact• South Africa: priorities approved by NEDLAC• Bulgaria: helped to build a national consensus
regarding pension reform measures.• NOTE: Governments and social partners were offered immediate responses, that is, ongoing work and immediate support for urgent new priorities would not have to wait for the scans to be ready!
5. Process at country level: social dialogue and production of well prioritized country roadmap
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6. Follow-up technical support Extract from South Africa Action Plan
As agreed with the tripartite Decent Work Technical Team at NEDLAC and integrated into the DWCP Implementation Matrix.
Global Jobs Pact, Decent Work Response
ILO engagement
Exploring policies to promote universal income protection
Public employment schemes and the social grant system
Support to Phase II of ILO/NPC/UNDP/NALEDI project (ongoing TC project)
Promoting effective social dialogue and sound industrial relationsCollective bargaining and social dialogue Research / study on role of collective bargaining in the crisis and recovery.
Promote knowledge-sharing on the role of collective bargaining and social dialogue in recovery.
Promoting employment through inclusive job-rich growthEmployment creation potential of sectoral strategies
Assess employment creation potential of different sectors / strategies with a view to enhancing the employment impact of the new growth path.
Technical support in forecasting and assessing the employment impact of green jobs strategy
Employment and Infrastructure investment
Analytical and policy support to maximize employment impact of public investment in infrastructure.
Capacity building….
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1. Work under assignment 1 was reported to the GB in March, 2010; Nov 2010; March, 2011; including participation of Regional Directors
2. Work under assignment 1, as part of GJP implementation was also reported to the ILC, 2010 as part of the recurrent item report on Employment.
Additional issues:
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• External evaluation of assignment
• GJP Learning Event
• Finalize « loose ends »:• Nigeria• Mali• Coordinate spending of remaining funds.
EXIT strategy from GJP Assignment 1
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ASSIGNMENT 2: COUNTRY BASED POLICY ANALYSIS
Develop a coordinated approach to ILO’s DW country level analysis as a basis for services to constituents and development of effective DWCPs:
(i) Work with Gateway Assignment to develop an Office-wide approach to Collection of country information and analysis involving the same consultative process across the Office;
(ii) Develop and apply a common methodology for Decent Work country level policy analysis building on Global Jobs Pact Scan approach, integrating it with country profiles, Decent Work Indicators and other country level reviews, in order to develop and apply one overall approach on Decent Work Country Scans.
(iii) Ensure the relevance and use of a common template for the development and review of decent work country programmes (DWCP) and their linkages with UNDAF, country based UN reform processes and other broader development cooperation frameworks. It should also inform country/sub-regional and regional policy analysis and advice.
(iv) Develop and apply a staff capacity building plan in collaboration with the regions and the ILO Centre in Turin.
Next Step: DG Announcement, 30 August, 2011
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LESSONS, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
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Did they have the Potential Benefits envisaged?
At country level Did they help to enhance the social dialogue about policies to respond to the
crisis at the national level Did the standardized template helped to promote policy coherence and more
integrated approaches at the country-level? Were the growth and demand-side macroeconomic issues well covered? Did they contribute to better policy development? Did they help as an input to redefine DWCPs priorities? Did they help to improve inter-agency partnerships and UN country
programming?
At the level of the Office Did the managerial process help to strengthen the capacity of the Office to
deliver integrated technical assistance Did it help to have better, more integrated and just in time knowledge about
decent work crisis responses? Was sufficient ownership by different units developed? What was the experience with the use of consultants?
Assessment of the experience
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THANK YOU
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