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Repetition Articles 1 and 2 of the Convention. Formulation and implementation of an active employment policy. The Committee notes that the Government indicates that economic reforms undertaken in Uzbekistan have facilitated stable economic growth and resulted in increased employment and income per family, which is an important means of reducing child labour. It further indicates that even during the global crisis there has been a considerable increase in employment due to the implementation of the 2009–12 Anti-Crisis Programme of Measures which included specific targeted measures for job recovery and employment creation. As a result of these measures, 970,900 new jobs were created in 2011 following the creation of a favourable business environment for entrepreneurs and small businesses, the establishment of a legal and regulatory framework to facilitate home-work arrangements, and the development of infrastructure and transport and communications networks. The Committee notes that the Uzbek economy recorded 8.3 per cent growth in GDP in 2011. The Committee notes the information provided by the Government concerning the 2011–13 General Agreement on socio-economic issues, a tripartite agreement listing the measures to be taken to create jobs and reduce unemployment. The Government reports that 141,600 jobs were created during the reporting period in 32 districts with particularly high levels of unemployment as a result of the development of small and micro-enterprises, the organization of home-work arrangements, farming activities and the recovery of inactive enterprises. The Government indicates that the active employment policy in Uzbekistan facilitates the drafting and implementation of employment programmes developed as a result of the current labour market situation and forecasts for its development. The policy on regional labour markets is being implemented in the context of a nationwide programme, as well as through the development and implementation of regional and local employment support programmes, taking into account regional particularities in demographics and socio-economic development. The Committee invites the Government to provide detailed information on the formulation and implementation of an active employment policy and the results of employment policy measures implemented in the different regions of the country. It also invites the Government to provide information on the tripartite review of the results of the 2011–13 General Agreement in terms of employment generation.Vulnerable categories of workers. With respect to efforts to create employment for jobseekers, the Government indicates that from January to December 2011, 194 district employment support and social services centres placed 595,700 people in vacant posts or in jobs that had been newly created in the context of the anti-crisis programme. Of those 595,700, 265,100 were women and 437,000 lived in rural areas. Furthermore, in order to guarantee employment for high school graduates, a range of measures was developed and taken in each municipality and district to provide work experience for graduates and their subsequent employment in the enterprises involved. To that end, more than 127,000 enterprises and organizations were registered with a programme employing high school graduates. The Government also reports that 9,600 persons with disabilities were employed in specially allocated jobs in 2011, which was almost double the number employed in 2010. The Committee invites the Government to provide information on the impact of the measures taken in order to promote productive employment for vulnerable categories of workers such as women, young persons, older workers, persons with disabilities and rural workers.Article 3. Participation of social partners in the formulation of policies. The Government reports that trade unions monitor the creation of new jobs in accordance with the Job Creation Programme. In 2011, trade union representatives conducted random studies on 14,209 new jobs created in 1,663 enterprises. The placement of 290,249 graduates of technical colleges in employment in 85,452 enterprises was also monitored. The Committee invites the Government to continue to provide information on the consultations held with representatives of employers’ and workers’ organizations with regard to the formulation and implementation of an active employment policy.
The Committee takes note of the Government’s report received in March 2008, including the information provided in response to the Committee’s 2005 direct request, which was reiterated in 2006 and 2007.
1. Articles 1 and 2 of the Convention. Coordination of employment policy and poverty reduction. The Committee notes that a State Employment Promotion Fund to assist employment was established to finance measures to implement its employment policy. It further notes that in order to prevent the risk of job losses, and to promote stable paid employment for citizens, the Government’s activities are being complemented by programmes aimed at job creation. The Committee also notes from the Welfare Improvement Strategy of Uzbekistan (2008–10), set out in the Republic of Uzbekistan’s Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, that the rate of unemployment continued to fall from 3.7 per cent in 2004 to 3.0 per cent in 2006. In this connection, the Committee notes that Uzbekistan is also experiencing a rapid increase in the working-age population, whereby the proportion of the population which was of working-age increased from 54.5 per cent in 2004 to 56.1 per cent in 2006. The Committee further notes that the demand for labour will be shaped by state policy aimed at: (i) encouraging the placement of new, especially labour intensive industries, predominantly in the regions and settlements with high levels of unemployment and poverty; (ii) the creation and modernization of infrastructure contributing to economic development and to the creation of new industries and workplaces in regions with high levels of unemployment and poverty; (iii) the comprehensive development of rural territories; (iv) supporting small businesses; (v) creating and widening diverse forms of individual employment in regions with low levels of employment and a high poverty rate; and (vi) the expansion of human resources training for newly reintroduced modern industries financed by initiators of investment projects. The Committee further notes that policies affecting labour supply in the market will be aimed at: (i) revision and substantial strengthening of the practical orientation of all education programmes; (ii) more active implementation of employee professional development (training) programmes to retain them in the labour market during the restructuring of the economy; (iii) more active use of in-service staff training programmes; (iv) the gradual reduction of labour taxes; (v) the improvement of the registration and statistics of the employed population; and (vi) the substantial widening of legal and socially protected labour migration. The Committee requests the Government to provide in its next report information on the outcomes of specific employment creation policies that are part of its poverty reduction strategy. The Government is also requested to indicate the manner in which employment objectives are taken into account in the adoption of measures in monetary, budgetary and taxation policy, and price, income and wage policy. The Committee also asks the Government to provide information on the specific measures adopted to address the employment situation in regions and settlements with high levels of unemployment and poverty.
2. Labour market measures. The Government reports that a procedure was adopted for the development and implementation of an employment programme aimed at achieving a balance between supply of, and demand for, labour by organizing placements, vocational training and retraining of those not in work, redundant workers, and the unemployed. The Government reports that this employment programme provides for: (i) a brief assessment of the situation in the labour market; (ii) the establishment of new jobs in enterprises of all forms of ownership and industry, including small enterprises and private development; (iii) the development of new forms of employment based on denationalization and privatization of ownership; (iv) training and retraining of managers; (v) regulating the process of dismissal of workers; (vi) designation of regions or population centres as priorities in tackling the employment problem; (vii) the rational use of rural labour resources to establish enterprises to process agricultural production, the development of small farms and entrepreneurship; and (viii) the development of private secondary industry and self-employment and other forms of industry. The Government reports that measures taken to regulate the labour market situation have helped to increase levels of placement of persons who applied to the country’s employment service. The Committee notes from the Government’s report that over a period of nine months in 2007, of the 407,033 citizens registered with local employment agencies, 351,079 were placed in jobs. The Committee asks the Government to continue to provide information on the number of individuals benefiting from its employment services and participating in vocational training, paying particular attention to the rates of successful job placement. The Government is further asked to include information on measures taken to match education and training policies to the actual demands of the labour market.
3. Particular categories of workers. The Government states in its Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper that the reduction of the informal sector and the return of the labour force to the formal market will be a priority of the medium-term policy. The Government provides that an indicator of success at this stage would be for the employment rate in the informal sector to decrease from its current level of 56 per cent to 30 per cent. The Committee notes that the employment rate of women was lower than among men; however, their share in the structure of formal employment remained stable at 44 per cent in 2001–05. The Government further states in its Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper that there is an imbalance in the sectoral distribution of female labour, in that women dominate in the healthcare and education sectors, while men dominate in the construction, transportation and telecommunications sectors. The Government states that in all sectors women have less qualified jobs in comparison with men. The Committee ask the Government to include in its next report detailed information on the impact of such measures taken to meet the needs of particular categories of workers, such as women, young people, older workers and workers with disabilities.
4. Article 3. Participation of social partners in the formulation of policies. The Government reports that, by article 20 of its Employment Act, Coordinating Committees for Employment Promotion, comprising representatives of trade unions and other workers’ representative bodies, employers’ organizations, state authorities and other organizations concerned that represent the interests of citizens in need of social protection are to be established to elaborate joint decisions at the national and local levels on the determination and implementation of employment policy. The Employment Act also prescribes for the participation of trade unions and other workers’ representative bodies in employment promotion, and for the participation of employers in the implementation of state employment policy. The Committee requests the Government to provide information in its next report on the consultations held on the matters covered by the Convention with the representatives of employers’ and workers’ organizations, including details of their contribution to the implementation of an active employment policy. It similarly welcomes being kept apprised of the manner in which the Coordinating Committees for Employment Promotion effect consultations and closer cooperation with the social partners, and the results of such consultations.
The Committee notes with regret that the Government’s report has not been received. It hopes that a report will be supplied for examination by the Committee at its next session and that it will contain full information on the matters raised in its 2005 direct request, which read as follows:
1. The Committee notes the Government’s first report on the application of the Convention. It notes that the strategic goal of the labour relations reform is to increase employment on the basis of a more effective distribution and use of labour resources within the economy, to provide protection for workers’ rights while taking employers’ interests into account and to increase salaries in real terms and as a proportion of the national income. It further notes that the positive shifts in the economy that have taken place over the last few years have helped to reduce the unemployment rate. In 2003, 430,000 new jobs were created, of which 375,000 were in small businesses and the private sector. The Committee asks the Government to provide information on the impact on employment of the structural reforms and the extent to which employment has been created in the private sector, especially in small and medium-scale enterprises (Article 1 of the Convention). Please also provide information on the impact of the measures taken to promote employment of vulnerable categories of workers (women, migrant workers, self-employed workers), of the reforms undertaken in agriculture and of the measures taken under the Public Employment Programmes.
2. The Committee also takes note of the interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) of May 2005. The share of the Uzbekistan population below the poverty line was estimated by the World Bank at 28 per cent. The growth of the working-age population and the enterprise restructuring has led to significant excess in labour supply. Moreover, there are structural imbalances in the labour market, which are reflected in the substantial amount of unofficial employment, generating irregular incomes for workers. The Committee asks the Government to provide in its next report information on decision-making procedures and on employment policy measures, and on how they are reviewed regularly within the framework of a coordinated economic and social policy (Article 1, paragraph 3, and Article 2(a)).
3. Article 3. The Government indicates that the activities to facilitate employment and provide social protection involve local government bodies, employers, trade unions and other workers’ representative bodies. It further indicates that the National Tripartite Commission discusses issues concerning management of social, labour and related economic relations, assistance in upholding workers’ guaranteed labour rights and social security at the national, sectoral and regional level. In its comment on the report submitted by the Government, the Council of the Trade Unions Federation of Uzbekistan (CTUFU) underlines that, under article 19 of the Employment Act, trade unions are entitled to take part in the development and implementation of national legislative acts and local government decisions on State employment policy. The proposals that CTUFU submits to local governmental bodies and employers on joint consultations are generally taken into account in regional agreements. The Committee requests that the Government provide more details on the functioning of the National Tripartite Commission in relation with the matters covered by the Convention.
4. Collection and analysis of statistics. The Committee notes that, according to data from the PRSP (May 2005), the unemployment rate in Uzbekistan is around 4 per cent. The report indicates that 429,600 jobs were created in 2003 (87.3 per cent were created in small and medium enterprises, 69.9 per cent in rural areas). The Committee notes that the collection of data and analysis of the labour market should be the basis for the formulation of an employment policy within the meaning of the Convention. It hopes that in its next report the Government will further describe measures taken in this respect. Please also provide more detailed statistics on the situation, level and trends of employment, unemployment and underemployment, by age, sex, level of education and sector of activity.
5. Education and training. The Committee notes the different programmes and measures that are being implemented in order to ensure quality education and to improve State management of employment placement, vocational training and retraining redundant workers and the unemployed. It asks the Government to provide in its next report, information on the impact on employment of these programmes and measures.
6. Employment service. The Government indicates in its report that the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection is responsible for the realization of the State employment policy. The CTUFU indicates that on 24 January 2001 was issued Joint Resolution No. 4-2-16/2, which sets out their agreement on coordination of employment-related activities. The Committee asks the Government to provide information on the impact of the employment services in providing assistance to job search, training/retraining or public work programmes for unemployed workers. It also requests information on the implementation of the agreement on coordination of employment-related activities made by the Ministry and the CTUFU.
The Committee notes that the Government’s report has not been received. It hopes that a report will be supplied for examination by the Committee at its next session and that it will contain full information on the matters raised in its 2005 direct request, which read as follows: