Proposed wage increase worries businesses
Proposed wage increase worries businesses
Businesses say that a proposed minimum wage of 16 percent in 2016 will cause them to go bankrupt, and local products would not have export markets if workers are laid off.
The minimum wage would increase by VND420,000-600,000 in the first plan, by VND350,000-550,000 in the second and by VND375,000-520,000 a month in the third plan.
The federation is expected to have a meeting with the National Wage Council and the business community at the end of August to discuss the issue before a final decision is made.
Nguyen Thi Thanh Huyen, general director of Garment Company No 10 in Hanoi, said that salaries now accounts for 53 percent of total expenses of medium- and larger enterprises.
If the minimum wage increases by 16 percent and all other types of expenses remain unchanged, the enterprises will see profits decrease by 25 percent.
With the minimum wage levels applied for 2015, Garment Company No 10 has to pay VND15 billion more for insurance premiums alone for its 7,200 workers, while workers have to pay VND4.85 billion more.
If the proposed 16 percent minimum wage increase is applied, the company would have to pay an additional amount of VND10 billion, while workers would have to pay VND4.5 billion more.
Meanwhile, since the beginning of 2015, garment companies have been facing big difficulties because of euro depreciation against the US dollar and the decrease in numbers of orders.
The director of a trade company in Hanoi noted that the current minimum wage policy is unreasonable.
He said that one worker now automatically receives VND3.5 million a month as stipulated by the 2015 minimum wage regulation even if they sit idle and do not create products. If the minimum wage increases, this will make laborers ‘lazier’.
The director warned that Vietnam should learn a lesson from Myanmar. As the minimum wage increased by twofold, orders left Myanmar for Vietnam and other countries, which caused thousands of workers to lose their jobs.
“The same scenario may happen with Vietnam,” he warned. “Foreign partners always consider the minimum wage tendency in Vietnam before they make decisions.”
Ninh Thi Ty, president of Ho Guom and Chien Thang Garment Companies, said if the minimum wage increased by 16 percent, the insurance premiums alone would increase by one billion a month.
She warned that any unreasonable minimum wage increase would lead to danger, especially when 70 percent of businesses do not make profits.