Put People First!
March for jobs, justice and climate
On 2 April the leaders of 20 of the world's biggest economies meet in London to tackle the recession and global financial crisis.
Even before the banking collapse caused recession, the world suffered vast poverty and inequality and faced the looming threat of climate chaos. Governments, business and international institutions have followed a model of financial deregulation that has encouraged short-term profits, instability and an economy fuelled by ever-increasing debt, both financial and environmental.
There can be no going back to business as usual. The only sustainable way to rebuild the global economy is to create a fair distribution of wealth that provides decent jobs and public services for all, ends global inequality and builds a low carbon future.
Recession must not be an excuse for putting off action for global justice or to stop climate chaos. Creating a just, fair and sustainable world is the only lasting way out of recession.
On 28 March thousands of people will march through London as part of a global campaign to challenge the G20 leaders.
Our message is clear. We must put people first.
Put People First: Decent jobs and public services for all
Put People First: End global poverty and inequality
Put People First: Build a green economy
Put People First! is supported by a wide range of civil society groups including unions, development organisations, faith groups and environmental groups.
G20 summit ‘cannot be allowed to fail’
- Implement a co-ordinated international recovery and sustainable growth plan with maximum impact on job creation focussing on public investment, active labour market policies, protecting the most vulnerable through extended social safety nets, and ‘green economy’ investments that can shift the world economy onto a low-carbon growth path.
- Give developing and emerging economies the resources and policy space to undertake counter-cyclical policies.
- Nationalise insolvent banks immediately so as to restore confidence and lending in the financial system and beyond this establish the new rules and mechanisms to control global finance with full stakeholder engagement.
- Combat the risk of wage deflation and reverse the growth of income inequality by extending the coverage of collective bargaining and strengthening wage setting institutions so as to establish a decent floor in labour markets.
- Prepare the ground for a far-reaching and ambitious international agreement on climate change at COP15 in Copenhagen this December.
