Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Regulating foreign workers now a top priority

- BY DINESH WEERAKKODY (Dinesh Weerakkody is a thought leader)

Sri Lanka is today facing a domestic labour shortage in some key sectors and industries. Demographi­c issues, social attitudes, expansion of the economy and outward labour emigration are contributi­ng to the shortfall. Generally, the lack of interest in certain types of jobs, low salaries and benefits, lack of qualified people and poor terms and conditions contribute to this overall shortage. Labour shortages are recorded in projects with foreign investment­s as well as in Sri Lankan-owned companies.

According to the Census and Statistics Department, there were nearly half a million vacancies in medium and large-scale private sector enterprise­s in 2017. The hardest to fill vacancies are found in the occupation categories of sewing machine operators (46,576), security guards (45,316) and other manufactur­ing labours (31,277).

These findings are collaborat­ed by industryle­vel studies, which indicate large-scale labour shortages in selected industries, including tourism, constructi­on and informatio­n and communicat­ion.

Moreover, industry-level estimates show that the labour shortages are likely to increase over time.

Sri Lanka is now weighing its options in terms of importing workers from regional countries to combat a shortage of constructi­on workers in the skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled categories. While there is a general labour shortage of around 750,000 workers, the constructi­on industry especially faces a major crisis, especially in terms of pending projects.

Although vocational training institutes have been set up by the government to train such workers, the youth who enrol see the perceived lack of dignity in constructi­on work, risk of physical harm, poor superannua­tion benefits and fear of being unemployed once projects end, as some of the key reasons for the lack of interest of people in the constructi­on industry.

The industry is said to be considerin­g the import of labour from countries such as Nepal, Bangladesh and India. Some of them have already got a contingent of foreign workers to manage the shortfall.

Key input

As the skilled labour component is a key input to economic developmen­t, the consequenc­es of not having the right skills leads to a productivi­ty drop and direct output losses. Acute labour shortages affect growth ambitions and investor confidence. Economic research in other countries suggests unemployme­nt below 5 percent builds wage pressure as businesses struggle to find suitable candidates.

Labour shortages – and the resulting higher costs – make markets inefficien­t and are a disincenti­ve for investment. In the absence of a clear policy to deal with the issue of labour shortages, industries are adopting different strategies to overcome the problem. Some industries have resorted to hiring foreign workers to fill vacancies using foreign contractor­s.

Challenges

The industry estimates point to a large number of foreign workers mainly from India, China and Bangladesh, working in different sectors. Some industries are mechanizin­g operations while other industries have relocated their factories to other countries, for example to Bangladesh.

Notwithsta­nding all the economic benefits, labour import to any country is a politicall­y sensitive issue, as it generally has far reaching political consequenc­es. Some of the key issues include loss of job opportunit­ies to locals due to cheaper labour cost, threats to social-cultural identity, health and disease, ethnic and religious disharmony and national security.

Unregulate­d labour immigratio­n may also lead to illegal immigratio­n, overstayin­g, abuse of visa conditions, risk of human traffickin­g resulting loss of public confidence in the immigratio­n system. Sri Lanka currently has no proper institutio­nal, legal, policy and operationa­l framework for facilitati­ng and regulating foreign workers into Sri Lanka. More than half a dozen government agencies are involved in the management of labour immigratio­n and often without any coordinati­on or centraliza­tion.

Way forward

Today there is an urgent need for a coordinate­d approach to address this issue. The National Human Resources Developmen­t Council has formed a Taskforce on Labour Immigratio­n with representa­tives from relevant government agencies to develop a strategy to transform the existing largely informal and irregular migration movements into a well-governed formal labour immigratio­n system based on internatio­nal norms that meets the demands of a strong, diversifie­d economy.

In the final analysis, one of the key questions regarding immigratio­n concerns its benefits and costs for the receiving economies. Fear that immigratio­n may, at least in the short run, have adverse effects on the labour market opportunit­ies of the young population and profession­als are the main reason for the opposition in Sri Lanka. Finally the economic outcomes of immigratio­n depend crucially on the skill structure of immigrants relative to the skill structure of the locals.

SRI LANKA IS NOW WEIGHING ITS OPTIONS IN TERMS OF IMPORTING WORKERS FROM REGIONAL COUNTRIES TO COMBAT A SHORTAGE OF CONSTRUCTI­ON WORKERS IN THE SKILLED, SEMI-SKILLED AND UNSKILLED CATEGORIES

HE INDUSTRY ESTIMATES POINT TO A LARGE NUMBER OF FOREIGN WORKERS MAINLY FROM INDIA, CHINA AND BANGLADESH, WORKING IN DIFFERENT SECTORS. SOME INDUSTRIES ARE MECHANIZIN­G OPERATIONS WHILE OTHER INDUSTRIES HAVE RELOCATED THEIR FACTORIES TO OTHER COUNTRIES, FOR EXAMPLE TO BANGLADESH

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