Viet Nam News

Most workers satisfied with salaries

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HAØ NOIÄ — With average monthly income of VNÑ5.5 million (US$261), nearly half of workers in Vietä Nam felt that their income was enough to cover basic living expenses, according to a recent survey.

The survey on salary, income and life quality of workers in 2018 was released yesterday by the Vietä Nam General Confederat­ion of Labour.

The average income for 2018 increased by 1.4 per cent compared to last year, with 84.4 per cent coming from basic salary.

According to the survey, 43.7 per cent of workers said their income was just enough, down 7.6 per cent compared to 2017.

Some 26.5 per cent said they need to be thrifty in their spending, while 12.5 per cent said they need to work extra hours to cover living expenditur­es (up 0.5 per cent compared to last year). Only 17.4 per cent of the respondent­s claimed they have money to spare, a slight increase of 1.3 per cent compared to 2017.

Around one third (32.1 per cent) of workers said their household earns enough money to deposit on average VNÑ 1.5 million in saving accounts for illnesses, accidents, unemployme­nt, or for holiday spending and their children’s education.

However, the survey found that money remains a challenge for workers, with 25.7 per cent not happy with their low salary and lack of opportunit­ies to earn extra income.

While issues like excessive hours, salary not being commensura­te with the labour, a lack of transparen­cy in salary policies, or businesses’ failure to carry out pay rises, didn’t receive a huge number of complaints, a substantia­l number of workers still brought these issues up, manifestin­g shimmering dissatisfa­ction that can lead to strikes.

According to the confederat­ion, in the first half of 2018, 131 strikes occurred, with 78.6 per cent taking place in foreign direct investment (FDI) enterprise­s and in the garment and textile industry (36.6 per cent), followed by footwear and electronic­s.

Enterprise­s in the public sector performed better in raising employees’ salary periodical­ly, but the period might be up to 2-3 years, longer than enterprise­s in private sector, which usually raise salary on a yearly basis, the survey concluded.

The Institute of Workers and Trade Union surveyed workers’ unions across 23 provinces, cities with high concentrat­ion of workers such as Haø Noäi, HCM City, Haûi Phonø g, Ñaø Nanü g, Bình Döông, as well as in constructi­on and railways sectors. The institute also sent out more than 3,000 open question forms for workers in 150 enterprise­s.

This was the largest scale survey the institute has conducted, with the number of respondent­s increasing threefold compared to other years, Vuõ Quang Tho,ï director of institute, said. — VNS

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