ILO Director-General discusses bilateral cooperation with the European Commission
During his first official visit to Brussels, the ILO Director-General met the Executive Vice-President for the European Green Deal, the Vice-President for Promoting our European Way of Life, and the EU Commissioners for Jobs and Social Rights and for International Partnerships. They discussed ongoing work and the priorities ahead.
BRUSSELS (ILO News) - ILO Director-General Gilbert F. Houngbo has made his first visit to the European Commission in Brussels since taking up office on 1 October 2022. He had several bilateral meetings and presented his vision for the ILO, in particular his proposal to forge a Global Coalition for Social Justice.
Becoming a climate-neutral continent has been the first headline ambition of this Commission, since it took up its mandate in 2019.
The Director-General also stressed the importance of social protection and ILO work in respect of the Global Accelerator on jobs and social protection for just transitions. He expressed his appreciation for the leadership the EU is taking in fostering a just green transition.
Mr Houngbo welcomed the opportunity to cooperate on migration and referred to the ILO’s recent work focussing on fair legal migration and skills recognition.
The Director-General thanked Mr Schmit for the Commission’s long-standing partnership with the ILO, and said that he looks forward to continuing and stepping up the close collaboration.
The Commissioner said that such an initiative is very relevant, also in the context of the fight against inequalities in income and opportunities. The Coalition was also seen as being in keeping with the Commissioner’s priority of ensuring access to education.
Mr Houngbo welcomed the strong EU-ILO collaboration to advance decent work in global supply chains, which also focusses on issues related to due diligence and the eradication of child labour.
The ILO and the European Commission are long-standing partners and share fundamental values and a joint commitment to promote decent work and international labour standards, to improve working conditions and to foster social and economic progress. This cooperation continues to lead to tangible improvements in the world of work.