ILO Report
Key indicators of the labour market. 5th Edition, Geneva, 2007

An important role of the International Labour Organization (ILO) is
to identify global employment challenges where economic growth and decent
work opportunities are most needed around the world. The Key Indicators
of the Labour Market (KILM) highlights global trends relating to the
world of work using world and regional estimates and country-level data
of labour force participation, employment, employment by sector, employment
by status, unemployment, youth unemployment, employment elasticities
and working poverty.
Defining effective labour market strategies at the country level requires
first and foremost the collection, dissemination and assessment of the
up-to-date and reliable labour market information. Once a strategy is
decided, continuing information and analysis are essential to monitor
progress towards goals and to adjust policies where needed. Labour market
information and analysis must be viewed as the cornerstone for developing
integrated strategies to promote standards and fundamental principles
and rights at work, productive employment, social protection and dialogue,
as well as to address the cross-cutting themes of gender and development
this is where the KILM comes in.
In 1999 the ILO launched the KILM programme to improve the dissemination
of information and analysis relating to key elements of the worlds
labour markets. The KILM is designed with two primary objectives in
mind: (1) to present a core set of labour market indicators and analysis;
and (2) to improve the availability of the indicators to monitor new
employment trends. The KILM aims to meet these objectives by disseminating
20 key indicators of the labour market associated with the
decent work initiative (listed in box 1): employment and variables relating
to employment (status, sector, hours, etc.), the lack of work and the
characteristics of jobseekers, education, wages and compensation costs,
labour productivity and working poor. Taken together, the KILM indicators
give a strong foundation from which to begin addressing key questions
related to labour underutilization and decent work deficits.
In addition to presenting indicators for assessing labour market conditions,
the KILM 5th Edition attempts to expand the knowledge base on the relationships
between poverty, decent work deficits and labour underutilization through
the use of these indicators.
The KILM 5th Edition
The first chapter of the KILM 5th Edition is dedicated to a more in-depth
analysis of certain indicators with an emphasis on showing how the indicators
can highlight vital issues that are associated with economic outcomes
and provide recommendations. The key issues chapter of this
edition contains three topics that have a recurring theme: the need
to assess progress made towards full, decent and productive employment
objectives and thus reductions in labour underutilization
using a comprehensive set of indicators. The topics are: (1) Decent
employment and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) : Description
and analysis of a new target; (2) Assessing vulnerable employment:
The role of status and sector indicators; and, (3) Beyond
the employment/unemployment dichotomy: Measuring the quality of employment
in low income countries.
The first topic on decent employment and the MDGs discusses the new
target for MDG 1, which emphasizes the importance of full, decent and
productive employment as the key element for poverty reduction. A set
of four initial indicators was selected to assess progress made towards
this target: employment-to-population ratios (KILM 2), vulnerable employment
(identified using status in employment in KILM 3), working poverty (KILM
20) and labour productivity (KILM 18). Regional trends for these four
indicators are examined to verify which regions are on track towards
achieving decent work objectives in the context of MDG 1. Even though
users are discouraged from singling out any one indicator, taken together
the four indicators provide an initial starting point for assessing
labour underutilization and decent work deficits.
The second topic highlights the possibility of identifying vulnerable
groups in the labour market using employment by status (KILM 3) in conjunction
with other indicators and, in particular, employment by sector (KILM
4). Employed persons are identified as vulnerable if they
risk working under inadequate conditions that is, if they are
more at risk of lacking full, decent and productive employment. Given
pervasive labour underutilization in developing countries, large segments
of the employed are vulnerable, and the challenge is to identify these
segments using standardized statistics that are readily available and
can be generated by national statistical agencies.
The last topic on the employment/unemployment dichotomy reflects some
of the limitations of current indicators on job quality. The purpose
is to evoke thought and discourse on how to better empirically capture
the concept of job quality so as to inform employment policies, particularly
for developing countries. In the meantime, this section supports two
conclusions. First, in the absence of an all inclusive indicator, current
indicators, despite their limitations, should be used to complement
each other in an effort to provide a more detailed picture of job quality
in developing countries. The KILM indicators discussed include employment-to-population
ratios (KILM 2), status in employment (KILM 3), hours of work (KILM
6), employment in the informal economy (KILM 7), time-related underemployment
(KILM 12) and working poverty (KILM 20). Many of these indicators are
indeed used to analyse decent work deficits, particularly with the introduction
of the new MDG target as discussed above. Second, qualitative indicators,
while posing greater difficulty of measurement, serve as the only means
by which to approximate the extent of inadequate employment and are,
therefore, necessary to complement an analysis of labour markets in
developing countries.
Complete document : http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/strat/kilm/index.htm