ILO - International Labour Organization

07/15/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/16/2026 06:16

L'OIT salue les priorités des BRICS en matière de protection sociale, d'emploi des femmes, de formalisation de l'emploi et d'avenir du...

Réunion des ministres du Travail et de l'Emploi des pays du BRICS (15-16 juillet 2026)

L'OIT salue les priorités des BRICS en matière de protection sociale, d'emploi des femmes, de formalisation de l'emploi et d'avenir du travail

L'OIT salue le rôle moteur de l'Inde dans la promotion des priorités en matière de travail et d'emploi durant sa présidence des BRICS et réaffirme son soutien à la coopération des BRICS en faveur du travail décent.

15 juillet 2026

BRICS Labour and Employment Ministers' Meeting in Hyderabad, India © BRICS India
The ILO and the BRICS

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The ILO and the BRICS

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HYDERABAD, Inde (OIT Infos) - L'Organisation internationale du Travail (OIT) a salué les conclusionss de la Réunion des ministres du Travail et de l'Emploi des pays du BRICS (LEMM), organisée dans le cadre de la présidence indienne du BRICS pour 2026, sur le thème « Renforcer la résilience, l'innovation, la coopération et la durabilité », et axée sur les marchés du travail favorisés par le numérique.

Les ministres ont examiné quatre priorités:

  • renforcer la protection sociale et la formalisation des marchés du travail
  • favoriser la participation et l'inclusion des femmes dans le monde du travail
  • renforcer la coopération en matière d'employabilité, de cartographie des compétences et de développement des compétences
  • mettre les technologies numériques au service de la protection de tous les travailleurs, y compris les travailleurs des plateformes numériques et de l'économie à la tâche

Le Directeur général de l'OIT, Gilbert F. Houngbo, a salué le rôle moteur de l'Inde pour avoir placé les questions du travail et de l'emploi au cœur de l'agenda des BRICS.

« Les priorités identifiées ne pourraient tomber à un moment plus opportun », a-t-il déclaré dans un message vidéo adressé aux participants à la réunion.

ILO Director General address at the BRICS Labour and Employment Ministerial Meeting in India

Mr Houngbo also praised India's success in extending social protection to a large majority of its citizens. "This milestone offers lessons that can be shared through South-South cooperation," he added.

The Ministers committed to progressively expanding social protection coverage in line with national circumstances, while recognizing the importance of sustainable financing, labour market formalization and improved social security benefits for workers through bilateral and multilateral cooperation.

Women's participation in the labour market was another major focus. The ILO welcomed BRICS discussions on investing in the care economy, expanding access to skills and lifelong learning, ensuring equal pay, preventing violence and harassment in the world of work, and promoting women's entrepreneurship and leadership.

According to ILO estimates, investment in a universal care policy package in BRICS countries could generate around 165 million jobs by 2030. Such investments can increase women's employment, reduce gender pay gaps and stimulate economic growth.

On skills and employability, BRICS countries discussed how to strengthen labour market intelligence, improve skills forecasting and make training systems more responsive to demand in green, digital and care economies. Ministers also took note of the ongoing ILO feasibility study, undertaken with India and Brazil, on an International Reference Classification of Occupations to support cooperation in these emerging sectors.

The meeting also addressed the potential of digital technologies to improve worker protection. ILO and ISSA analysis identified key digital enablers including simplified worker registration, contribution collection, benefits management, identity verification, digital payments, mobile access, skills profiling, career guidance and job matching. The paper stressed that digitalization must be inclusive, rights-based and supported by strong governance, data protection and institutional capacity.

"Well-governed digital transformation can expand decent work opportunities and ensure that innovation serves people, not the other way around," Mr Houngbo said. "The recent adoption of ILO Convention No. 193 on decent work in the platform economy shows how countries can navigate changes while protecting workers' rights."

India's priorities were reflected in the adoption of BRICS CONNECT - the BRICS Cooperation Network for Capacity Building, Employability, New Skills and Technology. The platform builds on the existing BRICS Social Security Virtual Liaison Office (BRICS VLO) and provides a streamlined and flexible framework for cooperation on social security, skills development, women's workforce participation and digitalization. The Outcome Declaration welcomes BRICS CONNECT as a platform to support South-South cooperation, knowledge exchange and capacity development.

Ministers welcomed the technical support provided by the ILO and ISSA and expressed their commitment to continuing close cooperation with both organizations.

The ILO reaffirmed its readiness to continue supporting BRICS members through technical advice, labour market data and policy analysis, capacity development and South-South and triangular cooperation in advancing decent work priorities. The BRICS intergovernmental organization comprises 11 member countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Indonesia.

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