This study provides a comparative analysis of industrial safety regulations in developed, developing, and underdeveloped countries, with emphasis on legal frameworks, enforcement mechanisms, and sector-specific standards. Drawing on secondary data from the International Labour Organization (ILO), World Health Organization (WHO), Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and national regulatory bodies, the research highlights marked disparities in regulatory coverage, compliance, and enforcement intensity across economic contexts. Developed nations demonstrate near-universal legislative coverage (≈95%), frequent regulatory updates, widespread ISO 45001 adoption, and compliance rates above 90%, supported by robust enforcement averaging over ten inspections per enterprise annually. Developing nations achieve moderate coverage (≈70%), partial adoption of international standards, and compliance around 60%, while underdeveloped nations remain critically behind with fragmented or outdated laws, minimal standard adoption, compliance averaging 35%, and weak enforcement with fewer than three inspections annually. The findings identify enforcement intensity and institutional capacity as decisive factors shaping compliance and safety outcomes. To address these gaps, the study proposes a harmonized global safety framework based on five pillars: universal minimum standards aligned with ISO 45001, local adaptability, stronger enforcement, capacity building, and culturally tailored safety communication. The study concludes that advancing industrial safety globally requires coordinated action by governments, industries, workers, and international organizations to reduce workplace accidents, improve productivity, and ensure dignified working conditions across all economies.
Sharma et al. (Tue,) studied this question.