We Can End Child Labour In Africa, Here’s How

“We shouldn’t wait for development to end child labour. On the contrary, ending child labour is key to sustainable development.” says ILO Assistant Director-General and Regional Director for Africa, Cynthia Samuel Olonjuwon.

With 92 million girls and boys in child labour — one in five children — Africa is the most affected region in the world. Eliminating child labour worldwide will not be achieved without a breakthrough here.

This is not justifiable. Children have the right not to work. Children trapped in child labour today are the unskilled labour force of tomorrow. Ending child labour is key to sustainable development. Urgent measures to end child labour should be viewed as an investment for the future.

Is there hope of ending this situation? Absolutely Yes! As the ILO Director-General Guy Ryder said, “Optimism relies on political will. You don’t have to be a dreamer to be optimistic. You need to have good reasons to be optimistic”. We have 92 million reasons to be optimistic about ending child labour in Africa.

So, what should be done?

The recently concluded 5th Global Conference on the Elimination of Child Labour in South Africa reiterated the need to focus on prevention. This is particularly true for Africa – a young continent with a fast-growing population. If we don’t act now, we should expect 105 million children to be in child labour in Africa in 2025, worsening in the following years.

It is critical to tackle the root causes of child labour in our continent. These include the lack of access to free quality education, high levels of poverty and vulnerability of households, limited decent work opportunities for parents and young people, and very high levels of informality and inequalities. In Africa, four out of five children in child labour live in rural areas and work in agriculture, a sector where workers are often functionally dependent on the unpaid work of children. In addition, Africa is one of the regions most affected by crises linked to conflict, disasters, and climate change.

The Durban Call to Action demands scaled-up action in six key areas to address these root causes, among which are: the need to ensure free quality education, to promote decent jobs for young people and adults and the need to invest in social protection as a means to reduce poverty and vulnerability.

This year on the World Day on the Elimination of Child Labour, I would like to focus on the critical importance of social protection to end child labour in Africa.

Exposure to shocks (sudden job loss, illness, or injury to family members) increases the chances that a child will work. Social protection reduces vulnerabilities and empowers communities by ensuring that children attend and remain in school and that parents have the income to sustain their development and education. A newly published ILO-UNICEF report shows that social protection reduces child labour and facilitates schooling.

There are regions where child labour has been reduced over time. Some countries have successfully lowered child poverty and raised social protection levels for children and their families. However, Africa faces a double challenge in comparison to other continents. It is the continent with the highest prevalence and the largest numbers of children in child labour and the lowest social protection coverage. In Africa, 83% of the population has no social protection. Similarly, within Africa:  Western, Central and Eastern Africa are the three sub-regions with the largest proportion of children in child labour and also have the lowest social protection coverage.

Universal social protection and the elimination of child labour are both priorities in the regional plan of the African Union, governments, workers’ and employers’ organizations, the ILO and other development partners. In Africa, anchored in the 2019 Abidjan Declaration, the ILO aims to accelerate social protection coverage to 40% by 2025, especially for informal and rural populations.

We see emerging models of interventions designed to simultaneously contribute to improving social protection coverage and ending child labour. In Côte d’Ivoire, for instance, the ILO supports the National Health Insurance Fund to extend universal health coverage to smallholder farmers working in cocoa. Through a supply chain approach, the value chain’s existing sourcing and operational structure are used as an alternative distribution channel, thereby increasing access to services and improving client experience.

Cooperatives and their commercial partners have supported the National Health Insurance Fund in organizing awareness-raising and enrollment campaigns and exploring financing strategies to cover the payment of contributions. The model also focuses on delivering quality services by health service providers at the community level, building trust and reducing reluctance.

As a result, 1,815 smallholder cocoa farmers have been enrolled in the universal health coverage scheme and have received a social security number. This is just the beginning. The model is now being replicated in other districts of Côte d’Ivoire with the support of several private sector companies. Moreover, this good African practice is being adapted and replicated in two other African countries, Ghana and Nigeria. Working closely with other development partners, models like this are being scaled up as a crucial part of implementing the Africa Regional Social Protection Strategy 2021-2025.  

By demonstrating high-level political will and African home-grown, innovative models of interventions, our continent sends a strong message to the world: we are aware of the challenge, working on it as a matter of priority, and as a region, we are driving the change.

(By Cynthia Samuel-Olonjuwon)

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