November 20 is Universal Children’s Day, a day devoted to
observing the welfare of the world’s children.
According to the International Labor Office, there are about
168 million child laborers globally, which accounts for approximately one in 10
of the world’s children.
An estimated 13 million children work in India alone,
despite laws prohibiting child labor and mandating school attendance.
About four percent of child laborers are in forced or bonded
labor, prostitution, or fighting in armed conflict. The remainder of the
world’s child laborers work in family businesses or on family farms, where they
often toil as much as 27 hours per week and are, like the child tobacco
laborers, exposed to a variety of dangerous chemicals and pesticides.
In the US, there is no minimum age for children to work on
small farms, and children as young as 12 can work on tobacco farms with no
regulations to protect them from the hazards of the work.
Only the U.S and Somalia have not ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child
(CRC).
Globally, one of the obvious primary reasons that children
work is because their families need the income. As Charles Kenny wrote recently
in Bloomberg BusinessWeek, passing laws alone sometimes makes the situation
worse. Economists Prashant Bharadwaj and Leah Lakdawala studied the impact of
India’s 1986 child labor law and found that it drove wages for children down
and the number of hours they worked up, with the biggest impact felt in poor
families.
No comments:
Post a Comment