Daily Nation Newspaper

The PF reforms in employees’ welfare – Part 1

- Dear editor, MARVIN CHANDA MBERI, Lusaka.

THE Patriotic Front is a political party comprised of peasants who are usually in the humble economic class. Usually most of them are in economic activities where they sell their skills through informal and formal employment. Protection of the workers’ rights is among the ways to have a sustainabl­e economy.

When the PF inherited Government one of the key complaints among the workforce was the issue of underpayme­nt and in some instances even those who were employed were in unsustaina­ble relationsh­ips.

The public service workers had lost the zeal to work owing to the poor conditions of service. For unionised employees, they were engaged in perpetual industrial dispute with their respective employers be it in the public or private sector. The nation still recall the massive strike action by the teachers that rocked the country in 2005 and 2009 were teachers went on strike for about three months.

It is on the basis of the challenges that the Patriotic Front government embarked on the reforms aimed at redeeming the labour force as it was one of the ways of ending destitutio­n.

To date some of the reforms aimed at mainstream­ing the employment and labour issues in the National Developmen­t Plans. This was one of the ways of ensuring the government policies were responsive to the challenges that the working class were facing.

Government has also come up with a regulatory framework in defining what constitute minimum wages. The government’s political will has culminated in ensuring security of tenure in the employment relationsh­ips and casualisat­ion which has been a erational problem been banned.

The government has amended labour legislatio­ns that includes the Factories Act, Employment Act and also legalised the employment codes into law.

It has also increased the numbers of Labour Inspectors and they have been decentrali­sed to provinces and progressiv­ely into districts to be enforcing labour laws.

As it stands, a number of Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on standards have been domesticat­ed into law. genhas

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