10 Years After ILO Convention, Domestic Workers Still Battling for Recognition

Globally, domestic workers are still fighting for recognition as workers and essential service providers.

This is even 10 years after the adoption of a historic International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention that confirmed their labour rights,

A new ILO report says for many domestic workers, their working conditions have not improved in a decade and have been made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the height of the crisis, job losses among domestic workers ranged from 5-20 per cent in most European countries, as well as Canada and South Africa. In the Americas, the situation was worse, with losses amounting to 25-50 per cent.

Over the same period, job losses among other employees were less than 15 per cent in most countries.

Data in the report shows that the world’s 75.6 million domestic workers (4.5 per cent of employees worldwide) have suffered significantly, which in turn has affected the households that rely on them to meet their daily care needs.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated working conditions that were already very poor, the report says.

Domestic workers were more vulnerable to the fallout from the pandemic because of long-standing gaps in labour and social protection. This particularly affected the more than 60 million domestic workers in the informal economy.

ILO Director-General, Guy Ryder, says ”the crisis has highlighted the urgent need to formalise domestic work to ensure their access to decent work, starting with the extension and implementation of labour and social security laws to all domestic workers.”

A decade ago the adoption of the landmark Domestic Workers Convention, 2011 (No. 189), was hailed as a breakthrough for the tens of millions of domestic workers around the world – most of whom are women.

Since then there has been some progress – with a decrease of more than 16 percentage points in the number of domestic workers who are wholly excluded from the scope of labour laws and regulations.

However, a large number of domestic workers (36 per cent) remain wholly excluded from labour laws, pointing to the urgent need to close legal gaps, particularly in Asia and the Pacific and the Arab States, where the gaps are largest.

Even where domestic workers are covered by labour and social protection laws, implementation remains a significant issue of exclusion and informality. According to the report, only one-in-five (18.8 per cent) domestic workers enjoy effective, employment-related, social protection coverage.

Domestic work remains a female-dominated sector, employing 57.7 million women, who account for 76.2 per cent of domestic workers. While women make up the majority of the workforce in Europe and Central Asia and in the Americas, men outnumber women in Arab States (63.4 per cent) and North Africa, and make up just under half of all domestic workers in Southern Asia (42.6 per cent).

The vast majority of domestic workers are employed in two regions. About half (38.3 million) can be found in Asia and the Pacific – largely on account of China – while another quarter (17.6 million) are in the Americas.

Domestic workers are better organized today and can represent themselves to defend their views and interests. Their organisations, as well as organizations of employers of domestic workers, have played a key role in the progress made to date.

 

 

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