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Workers see dramatic fall in share of global income: UN


By AFP
Published : 05 Sep 2024 09:29 PM

Workers have seen their slice of the global income pie shrink significantly over the past two decades, swelling inequality and depriving the combined labour force of trillions, the UN said Wednesday.

The United Nations' International Labour Organization said that the global labour income share -- or the proportion of total income in an economy earned by working -- had fallen by 1.6 percentage points since 2004.

"While the decrease appears modest in terms of percentage points, in 2024 it represents an annual shortfall in labour income of $2.4 trillion compared to what workers would have earned had the labour income share remained stable since 2004," the ILO said in a report.

The study highlighted the Covid-19 pandemic as a key driver of the decline, with almost half of the reduction in labour income share taking place during the pandemic years of 2020-2022.

The global crisis exacerbated existing inequalities, particularly as capital income has continued to concentrate ever more among the wealthiest, it said.

"Countries must take action to counter the risk of declining labour income share," Celeste Drake, the ILO deputy director-general, said in a statement.

"We need policies that promote an equitable distribution of economic benefits, including freedom of association, collective bargaining and effective labour administration, to achieve inclusive growth, and build a path to sustainable development for all."

Deepening inequality

The ILO stressed that technological advances, including automation, were a key driver of the declines in labour income share.

"While these innovations have boosted productivity and output, the evidence suggests that workers are not sharing equitably from the resulting gains," the UN labour agency said.

It voiced particular concern that the artificial intelligence boom risked deepening inequality further.

"If historical patterns were to persist... the recent breakthroughs in generative AI could exert further downward pressure on the labour income share," the report said, stressing "the importance of ensuring that any benefits of AI are widely distributed".

The ILO found that workers currently rake in just 52.3 percent of global income, while capital income -- earned by owners of assets like land, machines, buildings and patents -- accounts for the rest.