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ILO Warns Oil Price Surge Could Trigger Global Job Losses

The International Labour Organization (ILO) has issued a stark warning: the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East is increasingly infiltrating global labor markets, posing significant risks to jobs, incomes, and working conditions. In its latest Employment and Social Trends May 2026 Update, the ILO emphasizes that the crisis is evolving from a regional security issue into a broad economic shock affecting fuel prices, supply chains, aviation, tourism, remittances, and the overall cost of doing business.

Economic Strain Extends Beyond Energy Markets

According to the report, the scale of the economic impact will depend largely on the duration and intensity of the conflict. One scenario outlined by the ILO projects oil prices rising approximately 50% above early 2026 averages. Under those conditions, global working hours could decline by 0.5% in 2026 and by 1.1% in 2027. The projected reduction would equal the loss of approximately 14 million full-time equivalent jobs in 2026 and 38 million in 2027. Real labor incomes could also decline by 1.1% in 2026 and by 3% in 2027, potentially resulting in losses totaling around $1.1 trillion and $3 trillion respectively.

Understated Unemployment And Cascading Effects

Despite the scale of the projected disruption, unemployment levels are expected to rise more gradually. The ILO projected a 0.1 percentage point increase in global unemployment during 2026, followed by a 0.5 percentage point increase in 2027. Sangheon Lee said the broader effects are expected to emerge through reduced working hours, weaker earnings, slower hiring activity and growing pressure on temporary and informal workers. Lee described the Middle East crisis as a potentially long-term structural shock for global labor markets.

Regional Vulnerabilities And Supply Chain Risks

The report highlighted elevated risks for regions including the Arab States and Asia-Pacific due to their dependence on Gulf energy flows, trade routes and labor migration networks. Working hours across Arab States could decline by as much as 10.2% under a severe escalation scenario, according to the ILO. The organization noted that such a contraction would exceed labor market declines recorded during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Complexities Of Transmitted Shocks And Policy Responses

The ILO said higher oil prices could trigger broader economic disruption affecting sectors including aviation, manufacturing, hospitality and construction. Migration channels and remittance flows linked to Gulf Cooperation Council countries could also weaken, increasing pressure on labor-exporting economies. Several governments have already introduced stabilization measures, including energy subsidies, direct cash support and assistance programs for businesses and migrant workers.

Strategies For Resilience In An Uncertain Future

Several governments have already introduced measures including energy subsidies, direct cash support and assistance for businesses and migrant workers. According to the ILO, however, these responses remain uneven and constrained by fiscal pressures.

Policy responses should focus on protecting jobs and incomes, particularly for vulnerable groups including informal workers, migrants, refugees and small businesses, the organization said. Growing geopolitical instability is also increasingly capable of triggering broader economic and labor market disruption far beyond the regions directly involved in conflict, according to the ILO.

Temu Faces €200 Million Fine Over EU Risk Assessment Shortcomings

Regulatory Repercussions For Risk Management Lapses

Temu was fined €200 million by the European Commission for failing to implement adequate risk assessment measures under the Digital Services Act (DSA). The penalty targets the company’s handling of illegal and unsafe products sold through its platform and reflects growing regulatory scrutiny of large online marketplaces operating in the European Union.

Inadequate Risk Assessment Framework

According to the Commission, Temu relied on general e-commerce industry data rather than platform-specific evidence when assessing risks linked to illegal or dangerous products. Regulators said the company failed to properly identify, analyze and evaluate systemic risks facing EU consumers. The investigation focused on risks associated with products including electronic chargers, baby toys and jewellery sold through the platform.

Alarming Safety Concerns

A mystery shopping exercise conducted during the investigation identified multiple safety violations involving products purchased through Temu. Several electronic chargers reportedly failed EU safety standards, with some overheating or catching fire during testing. Authorities also identified choking hazards and dangerous chemicals in baby toys, while some jewellery products were found to contain misleading labels or fail to comply with EU product regulations.

Design Flaws And Systemic Shortcomings

The probe extended beyond isolated product failures to examine the overall efficacy of Temu’s systems. The Commission highlighted that the platform’s use of recommendation systems and influencer-led promotion programs may inadvertently propagate the circulation of illegal products. Such systemic deficiencies represent a serious breach of obligations under the DSA.

Mandated Action And Future Compliance

Temu has until August 28, 2026, to submit an action plan outlining how it intends to strengthen risk assessment procedures and improve seller and product verification systems. The Commission said the company must introduce more advanced and evidence-based compliance measures to meet regulatory requirements. Temu described the fine as disproportionate and said improvements had already been implemented following the original 2024 assessment. European regulators indicated that additional sanctions remain possible if further violations or compliance failures are identified.

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