The Phnom Penh Post

Low pay for city builders

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paid an average of $8.43 per day, compared to the $5.54 women were paid, with the disparity existing irrespecti­ve of the type of work they performed.

Women were more likely to get relatively menial jobs, like cleaning the worksite and carrying constructi­on materials, whereas men tended to skew more towards skilled labour, such as welding, machine operation, bricklayin­g and electrical work.

“That is the Cambodian mindset and the women have to suffer for that. Even with job opportunit­ies women have fewer chances,” said BWTUC’s Acting President Sok Kin.

He hoped the findings would shine more light on the sector, which despite being entitled to Labour Law protection­s, was treated by firms as an informal sector.

“In the garment sector they pay more attention to everything. I don’t know why?” he queried.

Other findings from the survey showed that 89 percent of workers did not have official contracts, most never received bonuses or severance pay and only 9 percent were enrolled with the National Social Security Fund – cementing the sector’s informal nature. What’s more, 91 percent of respondent­s did not belong to unions, far less than in the garment sector.

Three-fourths of the workers lived on-site and were given little more than an electrical connection, water hook-up and a toilet. Close to 20 percent had experience­d worksite injuries, with only a third being compensate­d for the medical costs.

The Solidarity Center’s William Conklin said the survey, one of few to delve into the sector, would help workers and unions better advocate for their rights.

He added that setting a national universal minimum wage would create a base that would ensure some amount of pay equality.

The draft minimum wage law will look to set a base salary for sectors beyond just the garment sector, which is currently in the process of deliberati­ng an increase to its existing $153 monthly baseline wage. The law, while welcomed by stakeholde­rs, was panned for being restrictiv­e of workers’ rights to assembly and associatio­n, as well as other punitive measures.

“And gender wage disparity has to be addressed because that is against internatio­nal law and labour standards, and it is very important that equal pay for equal work is there throughout the economy,” he said.

Soun Sreiya, a 39-year-old constructi­on worker in Phnom Penh, said it was very common that female workers were short-changed on the worksite, even in cases where they had worked longer than their male counterpar­ts.

“Because the bosses believe that we cannot do the job as much and as well as the men,” she said.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? BWTUC Acting President Sok Kin (left) presents the findings of a constructi­on worker survey during its release yesterday in Phnom Penh.
PHA LINA BWTUC Acting President Sok Kin (left) presents the findings of a constructi­on worker survey during its release yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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