Việt Nam has
18m unofficial workers
HÀ
NỘI - Việt Nam has more than 18 million unofficial workers, according
to a report released in Hà Nội on Wednesday.
Việt Nam has more than 18 million unofficial workers, according to a report released in Hà Nội
on Wednesday. - Photo vnexpress.net
A joint
effort by the General Statistics Office (GSO) of Việt Nam, the International
Labour Organisation (ILO), the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social
Affairs’ Institute of Labour Science and Social Affairs, the report polled
nearly 20,000 households each month in 63 cities and provinces nationwide
from 2007. Data about unofficial workforce were added into survey
questionnaires from 2014.
Information
gathered revealed that about 60 per cent of unofficial workers live in rural
areas in the Mekong and Red River Deltas. In the northern mountainous
mid-lands and the Central Highlands regions, workers are mainly involved in
agriculture and forestry. Unofficial workers in Hà Nội and HCM City make up
more than 20 per cent of the total nationwide.
Most
unofficial workers are involved in manufacturing and processing,
construction, wholesale-retail and vehicle repair, accounting for about 70
per cent of the total. Lodging and catering services account for another 11
per cent.
The monthly
wages of these workers averages VNĐ4.4 million (US$192) a head compared to
VNĐ6.7 million for the formal sector. Up to 97.9 per cent of unofficial
workers lack social insurance compared to the 80.5 per cent of workers in the
formal sector who do have social insurance.
Vulnerable
group
Unofficial
workers are known to have unstable jobs, lack labour contracts or are forced
to work on verbal contracts to earn low income.
About 76.7
per cent of unofficial workers have no official labour contracts, according
to the report.
Particularly,
their employers operate on a micro or small scale, lack business registration
or fail to pay social and health insurance or other welfare to workers.
The report
shows that up to 43.9 per cent of unofficial workers are classified as being
vulnerable. Female workers tend to do jobs that are more vulnerable than male
workers. A total of 59.6 per cent of female workers work in vulnerable jobs
while the figure is 31.8 per cent for males.
Director of
the Institute of Labour Science and Social Affairs Đào Quang Vinh said
unofficial workers always had insecure employment, disadvantages in wage
arrangements, inadequate welfare and insufficient employment conditions.
To reduce
their vulnerability, he suggested adopting specific action plans to encourage
business households to apply for registration and provide them with support
in capital, technology, consumption and workforce training.
Nguyễn Thị
Xuân Mai, head of the GSO’s Population and Labour Statistics Department, said
the State should encourage unofficial workers to join voluntary social
insurance via aids.
Director of
ILO Việt Nam, Chang Hee Lee, said the unofficial economy was a common
challenge in many countries. To reduce unofficial workers, it was necessary
to promote official employment by creating opportunities for unofficial
workers to work in companies, to have labour contracts and to be paid social
and health insurance.
The report would serve as a basis to help ministries
and agencies put forward appropriate policies, he said. - VNS
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Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 10, 2017
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