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Reducing Income Inequality: Trade Unions Role and Views of the World Bank

Reducing Income Inequality: Trade Unions Role and Views of the World Bank. Ishaque Otoo Ghana Trades Union Congress. outline. Inequality in Ghana Informal employment Unions and the informal sector Challenges to union organisation in the informal sector The way forward.

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Reducing Income Inequality: Trade Unions Role and Views of the World Bank

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  1. Reducing Income Inequality: Trade Unions Role and Views of the World Bank Ishaque Otoo Ghana Trades Union Congress

  2. outline • Inequality in Ghana • Informal employment • Unions and the informal sector • Challenges to union organisation in the informal sector • The way forward

  3. Income Inequality in Ghana • High and rising income inequality • Income inequality and poverty reduction – hampering efforts at reducing poverty • Government effort at reducing income inequality • Dealing with the rising inequality – growth creates opportunity for the poor to make use of their most important assert – their labour

  4. Informal Employment in Ghana • The size of the informal sector – 86% of total workforce, higher than it was in 2000 • Why a large informal sector – low labour demand in the formal sector; inability of the formal private sector to absorb retrenched workers; absence of income support programmes; • Characteristics of the informal sector – low wage, poor working conditions; health and safety deficits; lack of social protection

  5. Unions and the informal sector • The need to organise in the informal sector: • Most retrenched workers were union members • large number of workers; poor working conditions – wage , health & safety, social protection etc • Boosting the membership of the unions – • public sector could not be relied upon for union membership; • the falling share of formal private sector in total employment; • the informal sector as the only source of membership

  6. Unions in the informal sector • Adopted a policy on organising in the informal sector – 1996 • The Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU); • The General Agricultural workers union (GAWU) • The Timber and Woodworkers’ Union (TWU) • Makola Traders Union (market women), Madina Traders Union – associate membership of TUC • The social enterprises project supported by the ILO

  7. Challenges to Union Organisation in the informal sector • Irregular nature of employment in the sector – hampers effective organization • Financial constraints • Negative attitude of government and its agencies towards the sector • Failure of unions to come up effective modes of organisation in the sector

  8. The Way forward • Defining effective organising mechanisms • Ghana TUC hosted International Conference on the Informal Economy (2006); • Ghana TUC is also coordinating a 4-country research on identifying best practices in organising in the informal sector • Continue to advocate for policies that promote employment in the formal sector

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