That number is 25 million higher than what the ILO predicted in
its last report in June, affected primarily by the disparities
in vaccine rollouts in poorer and richer countries.
Globally, the number of hours worked is set to be 4.3% less than
the pre-pandemic level, the ILO said.
However, when that figure is calculated based on countries'
income level, there is a 2.1 percentage points difference: Rich
countries saw only a 3.6% loss, versus a 5.7% for poorer
nations.
The ILO said economic stimulus packages were also responsible
for the disparities between countries.
Low-income countries could make up that gap in just over a
quarter if they were given more equitable access to vaccines,
the ILO said.
The uptake in vaccine rollouts at the start of 2021 had slightly
softened the blow of lost working hours in the second quarter,
the ILO said, when it had predicted a loss of 6%, 1.2 percentage
points more than the 4.8% actually recorded.
The ILO uses hours worked, instead of the unemployment rate, for
example, in an attempt to compare how the coronavirus pandemic
has affected the labour market globally in light of differing
definitions of employment within each country.
(Reporting by Miranda Murray; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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