One key for bringing health care to the masses

Craig Churchill, Team Leader of the Microinsurance Innovation Facility

Our work on financial inclusion is difficult to understand fully from Geneva, where nearly everyone has access to a huge range of financial services.

Fortunately, I have had a number of opportunities to do field research, conduct surveys, and organize focus groups in developing countries. That is when you get clear insights about the huge challenges that workers in the informal economy, day labourers, and microentrepreneurs face on a daily basis.

These discussions often evolve into conversations about risks – what are the risks that people are most concerned about, what keeps them up at night? Of course, the answers vary a great deal depending on the person and country: not having enough food to eat, no employment opportunities, concerns about their children’s future, natural disasters, theft and so on. But in general, the one concern that is mentioned most often is health: being able to afford decent health care without being impoverished in the process.

Continue reading

Sailing into the Maritime Labour Convention, 2006

It was a few hours before the official coming into force of the ILO’s Maritime Labour Convention, 2006. We were preparing to mark this historic occasion with a live webcast from a ship in Singapore harbour.  Our high-level, tripartite panel of seafarers’, shipowners’ and maritime administration representatives was ready. Our communications and webcasting team was ready.

But our ship was delayed due to a typhoon.  Continue reading

My year with the Dayak Ngaju of Central Kalimantan

,
Manager of the ILO/EIIP GLACIER Project in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia (pictured here with a villager)

Our jeep got stuck in the mud again. Without a word, we all knew what to do next. We got off and started to push. Villagers passing by also got off from their motorbikes to help.

It was the third time we were forced to stop in the last ten-kilometre stretch before reaching Aruk, a small rural village in Central Kalimantan (Borneo Island). We struggled for three hours on the muddy road, but we finally made it.
Continue reading