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Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office, and having met in its seventy-fifth session on 1 June 1988, and
Emphasising the importance of work and productive employment in any society not only because of the resources which they create for the community, but also because of the income which they bring to workers, the social role which they confer and the feeling of self-esteem which workers derive from them, and
Recalling the existing international standards in the field of employment and unemployment protection (the Unemployment Provision Convention and Recommendation, 1934. the Unemployment (Young Persons) Recommendation, 1935, the Income Security Recommendation, 1944, the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952, the Employment Policy Convention and Recommendation, 1964, the Human Resources Development Convention and Recommendation, 1975, the Labour Administration Convention and Recommendation, 1978, and the Employment Policy (Supplementary Provisions) Recommendation, 1984), and
Considering the widespread unemployment and underemployment affecting various countries throughout the world at all stages of development and in particular the problems of young people, many of whom are seeking their first employment, and
Considering that, since the adoption of the international instruments concerning protection against unemployment referred to above, there have been important new developments in the law and practice of many Members necessitating the revision of existing standards, in particular the Unemployment Provision Convention, 1934. and the adoption of new international standards concerning the promotion of full, productive and freely chosen employment by all appropriate means, including social security, and
Noting that the provisions concerning unemployment benefit in the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952, lay down a level of protection that has now been surpassed by most of the existing compensation schemes in the industrialised countries and, unlike standards concerning other benefits, have not been followed by higher standards, but that the standards in question can still constitute a target for developing countries that are in a position to set up an unemployment compensation scheme, and
Recognising that policies leading to stable, sustained, non-inflationary economic growth and a flexible response to change, as well as to creation and promotion of all forms of productive and freely chosen employment including small undertakings, co-operatives, self-employment and local initiatives for employment, even through the re-distribution of resources currently devoted to the financing of purely assistance-oriented activities towards activities which promote employment especially vocational guidance, training and rehabilitation, offer the best protection against the adverse effects of involuntary unemployment, but that involuntary unemployment nevertheless exists and that it is therefore important to ensure that social security systems should provide employment assistance and economic support to those who are involuntarily unemployed, and
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to employment promotion and social security which is the fifth item on the agenda of the session with a view, in particular, to revising the Unemployment Provision Convention, 1934, and
Having determined that these proposals shall take the form of an international Convention,
Adopts this twenty-first day of June of the year one thousand nine hundred and eighty-eight the following Convention, which may be cited as the Employment Promotion and Protection against Unemployment Convention, 1988:
I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
(b) The term "prescribed'' means determined by or in virtue of national legislation.
2. Each Member which has made a declaration under paragraph 1 above may withdraw it at any time by a subsequent declaration.
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 above, a Member, where it is justified by the extent of protection of its social security system, may avail itself, by a declaration accompanying its ratification, of the temporary exceptions provided for in Article 10, paragraph 4, Article 11, paragraph 3, Article 15, paragraph 2. Article 18, paragraph 2, Article 19, paragraph 4, Article 23, paragraph 2, Article 24, paragraph 2 and Article 25, paragraph 2. Such a declaration shall state the reasons which justify these exceptions.
3. Each Member which has made a declaration under paragraph 1 or paragraph 2 shall include in its reports on the application of this Convention submitted under Article 22 of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation a statement in respect of each exception of which it avails itself:
(b) That it renounces its right to avail itself of the exception in question as from a stated date.
(b) Increase the number of persons protected;
(c) Increase the amount of the benefits;
(d) Reduce the length of the waiting period;
(e) Extend the duration of payment of benefits;
(f) Adapt statutory social security schemes to the occupational circumstances of part-time workers;
(g) Endeavour to ensure the provision of medical care to persons in receipt of unemployment benefit and their dependants;
(h) Endeavour to guarantee that the periods during which such benefit is paid will be taken into account for the acquisition of the right to social security benefits and, where appropriate, the calculation of disability, old-age and survivors' benefit.
2. The provisions of paragraph 1 shall not prevent the adoption of special measures which are justified by the circumstances of identified groups under the schemes referred to in Article 12, paragraph 2, or are designed to meet the specific needs of categories of persons who have particular problems in the labour market, in particular disadvantaged groups, or the conclusion between States of bilateral or multilateral agreements relating to unemployment benefits on the basis of reciprocity.
II. PROMOTION OF PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT
2. Each Member shall specify, in its reports under article 22 of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation, the categories of persons for whom it undertakes to promote employment programmes.
3. Each Member shall endeavour to extend the promotion of productive employment progressively to a greater number of categories than the number initially covered.
III. CONTINGENCIES COVERED
2. Each Member shall endeavour to extend the protection of the Convention, under prescribed conditions, to the following contingencies:
(a) Loss of earnings due to partial unemployment, defined as a temporary reduction in the normal or statutory hours of work; and
(b) Suspension or reduction of earnings due to a temporary suspension of work, without any break in the employment relationship for reasons of, in particular, an economic, technological, structural or similar nature.
3. Each Member shall in addition endeavour to provide the payment of benefits to part-time workers who are actually seeking full-time work. The total of benefits and earnings from their part-time work may be such as to maintain incentives to take up full-time work.
4. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article 5 is in force, the implementation of paragraphs 2 and 3 above may be deferred.
IV. PERSONS PROTECTED
2. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph I above, public employees whose employment up to normal retiring age is guaranteed by national laws or regulations may be excluded from protection.
3. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article 5 is in force, the persons protected shall comprise:
(a) Prescribed classes of employees constituting not less than 50 per cent of all employees; or
(b) Where specifically justified by the level of development, prescribed classes of employees constituting not less than 50 per cent of all employees in industrial workplaces employing 20 persons or more.
V. METHODS OF PROTECTION
2. Nevertheless, if the legislation of a Member protects all residents whose resources, during the contingency, do not exceed prescribed limits, the protection afforded may be limited, in the light of the resources of the beneficiary and his or her family, in accordance with the provisions of Article 16.
VI. BENEFIT TO BE PROVIDED
(b) Where such benefits are not based on contributions or previous earnings, they shall be fixed at not less than 50 per cent of the statutory minimum wage or of the wage of an ordinary labourer, or at a level which provides the minimum essential for basic living expenses, whichever is the highest;
(b) To not less than 45 per cent of the statutory minimum wage or of the wage of an ordinary labourer but no less than a level which provides the minimum essential for basic living expenses.
2. Each Member shall endeavour to adapt the qualifying period to the occupational circumstances of seasonal workers.
2. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article 5 is in force, the length of the waiting period shall not exceed ten days.
3. In the case of seasonal workers the waiting period specified in paragraph I above may be adapted to their occupational circumstances.
2. Nevertheless, in the case of full unemployment:
(b) In the event of unemployment continuing beyond this initial period of benefit, the duration of payment of benefit, which may be calculated in the light of the resources of the beneficiary and his or her family in accordance with the provisions of Article 16, may be limited to a prescribed period.
4. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article 5 is in force, the duration of payment of benefit may be limited to 13 weeks over any period of 12 months or to an average of 13 weeks if the legislation provides that the initial duration of payment shall vary with the length of the qualifying period.
5. In the cases envisaged in paragraph 2 (b) above, each Member shall endeavour to grant appropriate additional assistance to the persons concerned with a view to permitting them to find productive and freely chosen employment, having recourse in particular to the measures specified in Part II.
6. The duration of payment of benefit to seasonal workers may be adapted to their occupational circumstances, without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 2 (b) above.
(b) When it has been determined by the competent authority that the person concerned had deliberately contributed to his or her own dismissal;
(c) When it has been determined by the competent authority that the person concerned has left employment voluntarily without just cause;
(d) During the period of a labour dispute, when the person concerned has stopped work to take part in a labour dispute or when he or she is prevented from working as a direct result of a stoppage of work due to this labour dispute;
(e) When the person concerned has attempted to obtain or has obtained benefits fraudulently;
(f) When the person concerned has failed without just cause to use the facilities available for placement, vocational guidance, training, retraining or redeployment in suitable work;
(g) As long as the person concerned is in receipt of another income maintenance benefit provided for in the legislation of the Member concerned, except a family benefit, provided that the part of the benefit which is suspended does not exceed that other benefit.
2. In assessing the suitability of employment, account shall be taken, in particular, under prescribed conditions and to an appropriate extent, of the age of unemployed persons, their length of service in their former occupation, their acquired experience, the length of their period of unemployment, the labour market situation, the impact of the employment in question on their personal and family situation and whether the employment is vacant as a direct result of a stoppage of work due to an on-going labour dispute.
(b) The severance pay may be reduced by an amount corresponding to the value converted into a lump sum of the unemployment benefit to which the persons concerned are entitled for a period corresponding to that during which the severance pay compensates for the loss of earnings suffered, as each Member may decide.
2. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article 5 is in force, the implementation of paragraph I above may be deferred.
(b) For acquisition of the right to medical care and sickness, maternity and family benefit after the end of unemployment, when the legislation of the Member concerned provides for such benefits and makes them directly or indirectly conditional upon occupational activity.
2. Where a declaration made in virtue of Article S is in force, the implementation of paragraph 1 above may be deferred.
VII. SPECIAL PROVISIONS FOR NEW APPLICANTS FOR EMPLOYMENT
(b) Young persons who have completed their studies;
(c) Young persons who have completed their compulsory military service;
(d) Persons after a period devoted to bringing up a child or caring for someone who is sick, disabled or elderly;
(e) Persons whose spouse had died, when they are not entitled to a survivor's benefit;
(f) Divorced or separated persons;
(g) Released prisoners;
(h) Adults, including disabled persons, who have completed a period of training;
(i) Migrant workers on return to their home country, except in so far as they have acquired rights under the legislation of the country where they last worked;
(j) Previously self-employed persons.
3. Each Member shall endeavour to extend protection progressively to a greater number of categories than the number initially protected.
VIII. LEGAL, ADMINISTRATIVE AND FINANCIAL GUARANTEES
2. The appeal procedure shall enable the claimant, in accordance with national law and practice, to be represented or assisted by a qualified person of the claimant's choice or by a delegate of a representative workers' organisation or by a delegate of an organisation representative of protected persons.
2. When the administration is not entrusted to a government department responsible to Parliament:
(b) National laws or regulations may also provide for the participation of employers' representatives;
(c) The laws or regulations may further provide for the participation of representatives of the public authorities.
3. Thereafter, this Convention shall come into force for any Member twelve months after the date on which its ratification has been registered.
2. Each Member which has ratified this Convention and which does not, within the year following the expiration of the period of ten years mentioned in the preceding paragraph, exercise the right of denunciation provided for in this Article, will be bound for another period of ten years and, thereafter, may denounce this Convention at the expiration of each period of ten years under the terms provided for in this Article.
2. When notifying the members of the Organisation of the registration of the second ratification communicated to him, the Director-General shall draw the attention of the Members of the Organisation to the date upon which the Convention will come into force.
(b) As from the date when the new revising Convention comes into force this Convention shall cease to be open to ratification by the Members.
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