Small head shots of individual people holding a red card with "Red card to child labour" slogan

Sustainable financing solutions for the elimination of child labour: towards coherent and sustainable national strategies

Ended
Marrakesh
Children from Africa pose for a picture, two of them hug eachother

Investing in the prevention and elimination of child labour – through social protection, education, decent work and related measures, as well as measures to identify and remove children from work and support their reintegration into the education system and decent alternatives – generates social and economic returns that far outweigh the costs. Global cost-benefit analyses have suggested that the economic gains from eliminating child labour could be several times greater than the financial investments required. Furthermore, more recent ILO work on social protection and public finance financing gaps confirms that spending on children and families is a foundation for inclusive and sustainable growth, not simply a budgetary expense. Yet despite the commitments made in the Durban Call for Action and recent discussions in the United Nations development financing process and the Seville Social Summit, many of the key systems that influence child labour – social protection, education, labour inspection and child protection – remain underfunded, and funding is often fragmented and unstable.

Against this backdrop, the session will focus on developing coherent and sustainably financed strategies to prevent, combat and eliminate child labour, relying primarily on national budgets and supplemented by international public funding and responsible private and philanthropic investment. Part I will provide a concise framing of what needs to be financed, and why, highlighting the core systems that reduce child labour risks, the importance of fiscal space, and what we know about financing gaps and flows.

The second part will address financing strategies and mechanisms: how countries can strengthen domestic resource mobilisation and optimise the use of their fiscal space (through taxation, contributions, budget reallocation and reforms), how Official Development Assistance and international financial institutions can be used more strategically as catalysts within national strategies, and how trade frameworks, responsible business conduct, and supply chain due diligence, alongside practical arrangements that engage the private sector in a transparent and nationally aligned way, can help to better align and scale private and philanthropic contributions with national priorities.

Interpretation is not available for the online broadcast.

Panelists

Photo of Noureddine Boutayeb
Noureddine Boutayeb
President, Moroccan Foundation for Early Childhood Education (FMPS)
Photo of Mabel Gómez Oliver
Mabel Gómez Oliver
Ambassador of Mexico to the Kingdom of Morocco
Photo of Roy L. Buenafe
Roy L. Buenafe
Regional Director, Philippines, Department of Labor and Employment
Photo of  Amany Konan
Amany Konan
Child Protection Specialist, Consultant to the Office of the First Lady of Côte d'Ivoire
Photo of Anton Leppik
Anton Leppik
Executive Secretary, Pan-European Regional Council ITUC-PERC
Photo of Nasser Ahmed Mohammed Al-Meer
Nasser Ahmed Mohammed Al-Meer
Chairman Advisor for Labour Affairs, Qatar Chamber of Commerce and Industry (QCCI)
Photo of Cristobal Ridao-Cano
Cristobal Ridao-Cano
Manager of the Social Protection and Labor Department, World Bank
Photo of Charlotte Bernhard
Charlotte Bernhard
Senior Policy Advisor, Netherlands, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Photo of Lorenzo Guarcello
Lorenzo Guarcello
Senior Economist, International Labour Organization (ILO)

Moderator

Photo of Frédéric Lapeyre
Frédéric Lapeyre
Director of the Priority Action Programme “Transition from the Informal to the Formal Economy”, International Labour Organization (ILO)