FNB2.FTU
FNB2.FTU
FNB2.FTU
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

FNB2.FTU

A place where you can share your hobbies, business ideas, or anything that you feel interesting...
 
HomeLatest imagesSearchRegisterLog in

Share
 

 GLOBAL WORKFORCE

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
Trịnh Ngọc Anh



Posts : 10
Points : 24
Thanked : 0
Join date : 2014-03-21
Age : 31
Location : De La Thanh, Dong Da Dictrict

GLOBAL WORKFORCE Empty
PostSubject: GLOBAL WORKFORCE   GLOBAL WORKFORCE I_icon_minitimeThu Apr 24, 2014 12:35 am

    Global workforce refers to the international labor pool of workers, including those employed by multinational companies and connected through a global system of networking and productionimmigrant workers, transient migrant workerstelecommuting workers, and those incontingent work and other precarious employment. As of 2012, the global labor pool consisted of approximately 3 billion workers, around 200 million unemployed.

 * Structure of global workforce:
    - New internatinal division of labour: The global workforce, or international labor pool, reflects a new international division of labor that has been emerging since the late 1970s in the wake of other forces of globalization. The global economic factors driving the rise of multinational corporations—namely, cross-border movement of goodsservicestechnology and capital—are changing ways of thinking about labor and the structure of today's workforce. With roots in the social processes surrounding the shift to standardization and industrializationpost-industrial society in the Western world has been accompanied by industrialization in other parts of the world, particularly in Asia. As industrialization takes hold worldwide and more cultures move away from traditional practices in respect to work and labor, the ways in which employers think about and utilize labor are changing.
   - Labour supply: The global supply of labor almost doubled in absolute numbers between the 1980s and early 2000s, with half of that growth coming from Asia.At the same time, the rate at which new workers entered the workforce in the Western world began to decline. The growing pool of global labor is accessed by employers in more advanced economies through various methods, including imports of goods, offshoring of production, and immigrationaGlobal labor rbitrage, the practice of accessing the lowest-cost workers from all parts of the world, is partly a result of this enormous growth in the workforce. While most of the absolute increase in this global labor supply consisted of less-educated workers (those without higher education), the relative supply of workers with higher education increased by about 50 percent during the same period. Around 85 million new workers entered into the non-farm workforce worldwide, associated with rising exports in developing countries and aging populations in more advanced economies. In 2010, between 90–95 million low-skilled workers worldwide were without employment, around 10% of the total, and there were also around 75 million young workers, 15–24 years of age, who were unemployed and seeking work. In the more advanced economies, around 40% of employers say that foreign-born workers are contributing to their labor supply.
    - Employment and unemployment: Employment is growing fastest in emerging and developing economies. Over the past 5 years, the incidence of long-term unemployment (the share of unemployed persons out of work for 12 months or more) has increased 60% in the advanced and developing economies for which data exist. Global unemployment is expected to approach 208 million in 2015, compared with slightly over 200 million in 2012.
The number of people employed in precarious work (also called "vulnerable employment")— employment that is poorly paid, insecure, unprotected, and cannot support a household—has increased dramatically in recent decades. This includes part-time employment, self-employment or freelance workhomeworkers, fixed-term or temporary work, on-call work, othercontingent work, and telecommuting jobs.
   - Demographic trends: These numbers show that, globally, the structure of the workforce has been changing. In addition to the economic and social factors described above, a large part of this restructuring is also due to demographic factors, changes in the structure of the world's population. In wealthier countries with more advanced economies, fewer people die from communicable diseases and, overall, life expectancies are much longer while birth rates are lower. In these areas, the overall median age is rising (seeList of countries by median age). The youngest populations, primarily those in Southeast Asia and Africa, are those in which overall life expectancies are lower — many children and some adults still die from communicable diseases — but the birth rate is also high.
* Implications:
   - Social vulnerability: One issue related to the shift of employment to countries with an overall younger population has to do with the dependency ratio in differing countries. The dependency ratio is an age-population ratio of those typically not in the labor force (the dependent part) and those typically in the labor force (the productive part). A high dependency ratio can cause serious problems for a country if a large proportion of a government's expenditure is on health, social security & education, which are most used by the youngest and the oldest in a population. The fewer people of working age, the fewer the people who can support schools, retirement pensionsdisability pensions and other assistances to the youngest and oldest members of a population, often considered the most vulnerable members of society.
   - Downward pressure on wages: Another issue can arise in regard to the capital-labor ratio in the global population. Freeman (2010) holds that the new entrants to the global workforce since the 1980s brought little capital with them, either because they were poor or because the capital they had was of little economic value. He estimates that the entry of ChinaIndia and the Eastern Bloc into the global economy cut the global capital-labor ratio to around 55–60% of what it otherwise would have been. The capital-labor ratio, according to Freeman, is a critical determinant of the wages paid to workers and of the returns to capital. The more capital each worker has, the higher will be their productivity and pay. Even considering the high savings rate of new entrants—he cites World Bank estimates that China has a savings rate of 40% of GDP—he estimates it would take 30 or so years for the world to re-attain the capital-labor ratio among the countries that had previously made up the global economy. This, along with the effects of the Great Recession, could mean that downward pressure on wages and compensation, particularly in more advanced economies, will continue for the foreseeable future.
   - Race to the bottom:"Race to the bottom" is a phrase coined to describe the potential outcome of companies searching for the lowest-cost in all their business needs. For example, lowest taxes and tariffs, land, materials, labor, etc. In terms of global labor arbitrage, the lowest-cost labor is often found in countries that have the fewest protections for workers. Such protections, collectively known as labor rights, include regulation of child laborworkplace safetywork hoursminimum wages, and the availability of collective bargaining. One potential outcome of widespread global labor arbitrage, then, is exploitation and even death of workers in countries that have the fewest protections. Another potential outcome is anundermining of the protections that are already in place in some countries; that is, a pressure to lower domestic and, ultimately, international labor standards. One example of this is employer abuse of guest worker programs wherein employers act to sponsor guest workers at lower wages in order to decrease the overall domestic standard wage for workers in a given occupation, such as with Information technology workers in the United States
Back to top Go down
 

GLOBAL WORKFORCE

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

 Similar topics

-
» The Global Workforce and Technology
» GLOBAL WORKFORCE TRANNING
» CNN article: "The global workforce: Challenge or asset?"
» Global Workforce basic concept & in Vietnam case
» The Role of Global Mindset in Developing Global Leaders

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
FNB2.FTU :: KEY CONCEPTS OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION :: Group 7 - Cosmopolitan Leadership, Teams, and the Global Workforce-