ILO offers wage reform recommendations to Vietnam
Specialists from the
International Labour Organisation (ILO) on November 8 shared experiences in
wage and social insurance issues and gave recommendations to Vietnam’s draft
plan for reforming wage, social insurance and benefits for national
contributors.
Deputy Prime Minister
Vuong Dinh Hue spoke at a meeting with ILO specialists on November 8
Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh
Hue, head of the steering committee for reforming wage, social insurance and
benefit policies for national contributors, said the Vietnamese Government is
drafting the reform plan, which is expected to be considered at the seventh
session of the 12th Party Central Committee in May 2018.
This is a difficult job since the
scope of the plan is large, Hue said, adding that it covers the public sector
and State-owned and private enterprises, relates to social insurance policies
– one of the pillars of social welfares, and impacts almost all people of
working age and retirees.
ILO Vietnam Director Chang Hee Lee
said the national policy on wage and social insurance is a key socio-economic
policy that affects all citizens’ livelihoods and businesses’
competitiveness. Across the world these policies can be controversial, and it
is hard for governments, trade unions and employers to reach consensus, he
added.
According to the ILO official,
minimum wage functions limitedly in some spheres of a market economy.
Collective bargaining between employers and employees is the key process to
specify actual levels of pay and other working conditions.
He said that collective bargaining
has yet to develop in Vietnam. Meanwhile, the Vietnam-EU Free Trade Agreement
requests the ratification of the ILO Convention No. 98 on the Right to
Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, which will promote wage bargaining.
Lee suggested Vietnam improves wage
statistics and enhance the capacity of the National Wage Council’s
secretariat in monitoring minimum wage’s impacts and ties between wages and
jobs.
He also asked for a formula
estimating adjustments to minimum wage or fixed parameters in that formula so
that adjustments to minimum wage are predictable.
Regarding ways to improve salaries
in the public sector, the official said this is a complex problem as it
relates to many different factors, including the size of the public sector
which is huge in Vietnam, the pay gap between public and private sectors, and
pay levels for different positions.
He suggested a basic wage in the
public sector be specified according to the rank employees hold while
allowances should be concrete numbers instead of coefficients.
At the meeting, ILO specialists also
recommended Vietnam to change its social insurance policy step by step and
expand insurance coverage.-VNA
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Thứ Năm, 9 tháng 11, 2017
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