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Vietnam looks to raise its minimum monthly salary by just
above 10 percent next year, the lowest level since 2013, a move that
apparently bows to the growing pressure of the corporate sector.
Under a
government decree that took effect early this year,
But at a
recent dialogue on wage polices, Vu Tien Loc, chairman of the Vietnam Chamber
of Commerce and Industry (VCCI), told the press that his organization
proposed an increase of “above 10 percent” to offset the recent currency
depreciation and make sure that the salary raise is in line with the current
labor productivity.
If the wage
hike outpaces productivity, it would affect the operations of businesses and
eventually have a bearing on economic growth, he said.
Pham Minh
Huan, deputy labor minister who chairs the National Wage Council, echoed Loc.
“The ministry has to hash out a solution that works for both stakeholders,”
he was quoted by news website VnExpress as saying.
The National
Wage Council, which advises the government on wage policies, is set to
finalize the proposed wage hike this month.
The plan
will be submitted to the government for approval in October and will take
effect in 2016.
Corporate
voices
Both foreign
and local companies often lament that minimum-wage increases will hit their
operations. They warn any further wage hikes will cause grave consequences on
Analysts say
corporations are using the large wage increase at one time, usually of around
15 percent, as an example of uncertainty in economic policy by the
government.
That is a
legitimate concern and it would be better to set a policy to increase the
minimum wage in accordance with the inflation rate or maybe a little more,
they say.
But at the
end of the day, “the minimum wage is still quite low, and even if labor
productivity is not as high in
“Foreign companies
appear to be lobbying the Vietnamese government to make policies favorable to
them even if not favorable to workers.”
A total of
235 wildcat strikes have taken place across
In late
March, tens of thousands of workers protested new rules to the mandatory
pension fund that aimed to keep all employees in the state pension system
until their retirement date.
The strike
compelled the National Assembly,
In the face
of growing corporate influence, the victory coming out of the March strike
shows that “worker solidarity can pressure the unions and the government to
listen to their legitimate concerns, even when foreign investors, chambers of
commerce, and economists try to sway the rule of law to fit their profit
interests,” said Angie Ngoc Tran, a professor of political economy at the
California State University, Monterey Bay.
The race to
lure foreign investors by a cheap labor force would only set off a race to
the bottom “unless workers get united — because strength is in the numbers —
and engage in peaceful dialogue with management and state officials as they
did in the strike [in March],” Tran said.
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Thứ Hai, 6 tháng 7, 2015
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