Ministries set to offer financial support to suspended workers

Published date10 March 2023
Publication titleThe Phnom Penh Post

Prime Minister Hun Sen has advised two ministries to provide financial support, starting from April, to workers in the textile-related sectors who were suspended from work or whose factories were shut down. He also allowed relevant ministries to increase cash for pregnant women and child under 2 for them to receive adequate nutrition.

Hun Sen gave the instruction while presiding over a graduation ceremony for 1,728 students from the Institute of New Khmer Generation, held in Phnom Penh on March 6.

He said the current global economic situation was not good, including in the US and Europe. Though the problem is not serious as yet, he said it affects the global economy through inflation.

He added that the global crisis had also affected the product orders for goods made in Cambodia, especially in the garment and footwear sectors, which reduced their operations due to the loss of revenues.

To address the crisis in Cambodia, he ordered Minister of Labour and Vocational Training Ith Samheng and Minister of Economy and Finance Aun Pornmoniroth to come up with an urgent response and launch the cash assistance programme to help vulnerable garment workers.

'I've received a report from a trade union which knew my WhatsApp number. The union sent me a message saying that the number of suspended factories have increased. The workers are requesting that we intervene,' he said.

'I conveyed the request to Ith Samheng and Aun Pornmoniroth. So, let's discuss a response to this issue. The number of workers affected is not as high as at the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic. So, we have to discuss the suspensions with factory owners.

'We may do something like … the government provides 40 per cent and factory owners contribute 30 per cent, starting from April,' he said.

Hun Sen also recalled that the government has been helping workers since 2008 in response to global crises, and that the current situation is not too serious for the government to address.

'As for the loss of income: If a person used to buy three shirts per year, but because their income has dropped or prices have gone up while their income hasn't, they might then only buy one shirt per year. So, market demand has also declined in crisis-hit countries, especially in Europe. If the demand in these countries falls, then their orders for our products also decrease,' he stated.

Hun Sen also advised relevant ministries to increase the available cash for pregnant women and children...

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