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7/2/2004
Benefits Of Eliminating Child Labour Far Outweigh Costs, UN Agency
Reports
The
benefits of eliminating child labour would be seven times
greater than the costs, according to a new United Nations
International
Labour Organization (ILO) report. Forcing children to continue working
- a practice that affects one out of every six youngsters,
or 246 million children - will
cost $5.1 trillion from now until 2020. But if they receive
an education instead, that figure drops to just $760 million
- an
amount that is more than offset by other social gains, the
ILO's International Programme on the Elimination of Child
Labour (IPEC)
says in the study.
"
What's good social policy is also good economic policy," said
ILO Director-General Juan Somavia. "Eliminating child
labour will yield an enormous return on investment - and
a priceless
impact on the lives of children and families."
The study, entitled Investing in Every Child: An Economic Study
of the Costs and Benefits of Eliminating Child Labour, is the first
integrated analysis of the worldwide economic costs and benefits
of eliminating child labour.
All
regions of the world would experience large net gains from
stopping child labour, the study says, "although the costs
would almost certainly exceed returns in the early years." Net
economic flows would turn dramatically positive, however,
as the effects of improved education and health take
hold. By
2020, costs
would be far outweighed by the returns, leaving total
annual benefits of around $60 billion.
In North Africa and the Middle East, the benefits would be the
highest relative to the costs - 8.4 to 1. In Asia, the ratio would
be 7.2 to 1 and in the countries with economies in transition,
5.9 to 1. In sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America the ratio would
be 5.2 to 1 and 5.3 to 1, respectively.
The worldwide net economic benefits of the hypothetical programme
would amount to 22.2 per cent of annual gross national income,
the report says.
"
Reaping the economic value of expanded education depends on countries'
ability to create new jobs, take advantage of higher levels of
human capital and develop economic policies to stimulate growth," the
report says. "Yet even if the effect of education
on future earnings was halved to 5 per cent, the
study estimates
that
global benefits would still exceed $2 trillion."
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