Social protection contributes to reducing child labour
(LĐXH)- Social protection reduces family poverty and vulnerability, thereby diminishing key drivers of child labour, according to a new report by the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).

However, too little progress has been made in ensuring that all children enjoy social protection, says the study. Worldwide, 73.6 per cent, or some 1.5 billion children, aged 0-14, receive no family or child cash benefits. This large protection gap must be closed and closed rapidly, the report says.
“There are many reasons to invest in universal social protection but eliminating child labour has to be one of the most compelling, given its pernicious impact on children’s rights and wellbeing,” said Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General.
Governments have a range of policies they can deploy to promote social protection. If policymakers do not act decisively, the COVID-19 pandemic, ongoing conflict, rising poverty, and climate change will only increase the prevalence of child labour, the study says.
“There are many reasons to invest in universal social protection but eliminating child labour has to be one of the most compelling, given its pernicious impact on children’s rights and wellbeing,” said Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General.
Governments have a range of policies they can deploy to promote social protection. If policymakers do not act decisively, the COVID-19 pandemic, ongoing conflict, rising poverty, and climate change will only increase the prevalence of child labour, the study says.
More than 160 million children worldwide – 1 in 10 children aged 5-17 – are still engaged in child labour, and progress has stalled since 2016. These trends were present even before the COVID-19 crisis. It is estimated that without mitigation strategies, the number of children in child labour could rise by 8.9 million by the end of 2022, due to higher poverty and increased vulnerability.
To strengthen social protection systems for the prevention and elimination of child labour, the report makes a number of recommendations: Close the social protection coverage gap for children; Build integrated social protection systems; Ensure that the design of social protection programmes is inclusive and child-labour sensitive; Build on the strong political commitment that already exists to end child labour and establish universal social protection to strengthen consensus for action; Promote investment in social protection systems as a driver of development./.
Hong Anh
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