Vietnam and Malaysia eye substantive cooperation in labour, conditions here are appreciated by Vietnamese workers


Le Ngoc Toan, First Secretary and Head of the Labour Management and Expert Committee in Malaysia (first, right) and First Secretary Thai Thi Huong (first, left) take a photo with Vietnamese workers at Ramatex Textiles factory in Johor. - Photo: Vietnam News/ANN

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 23 (Bernama-VNA): As of November 30, more than 17,000 Vietnamese workers had been working legally in Malaysia, according to the Vietnam News Agency (VNA), which cited the Malaysian Ministry of Human Resources.

Although this figure has decreased by about 50 per cent compared to the peak in 2003, the two countries' authorities still appreciate their practical labour cooperation.

According to the general assessments of employers, Vietnamese workers have good skills, learn very quickly, are diligent, and easily integrate into work and life in Malaysia.

With good experiences, skills and foreign languages, Vietnamese workers are often appointed as team leaders of production lines, guiding and supporting workers in other countries such as Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

Of the Vietnamese workers in Malaysia, more than half of them work in the manufacturing sector, about 10 per cent in the construction sector, more than 10 per cent in the service sector, and 10 per cent in the agricultural sector.

In 2003, the governments of Vietnam and Malaysia signed the first cooperation agreement on sending Vietnamese labourers to work in Malaysia. The agreement was re-signed in 2015 and 2022 within the framework of then Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob's official visit to Vietnam.

Sending Vietnamese workers to work in Malaysia is one of the effective cooperation contents, especially in the 2002-2012 period.

The year 2003 was considered the peak period as Malaysia recruited 38,000 Vietnamese workers to meet its labour demand.

Roland Hoo Choon Leng, distribution manager of Gimmill Industrial (M) Sdn Bhd, a company of Ramatex Textiles Group, said that currently the group is applying automation in the textile and garment process, so it is very necessary to have workers with good skills like Vietnamese workers.

He said besides good skills, Vietnamese workers are very diligent in learning foreign languages, many workers can speak both Chinese and Malaysian, so they start working and integrate with local life very well.

The group has also invested in Vietnam with three factories operating in Hải Phòng city, and Bắc Ninh and Nam Định provinces. Meanwhile, its factories in Batu Pahat and Kulai, Johor are employing more than 9,000 workers, most of whom are foreign workers, including about 300 Vietnamese workers.

Lê Ngọc Toàn, First Secretary and Head of the Labour Management and Expert Committee in Malaysia, said that although Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim's government has approved a plan to raise the minimum wage from RM1,500 to RM1,700 per month (approximately VNĐ10 million) starting from February 1, 2025, this is not very appealing to Vietnamese workers.

This is because Vietnamese labourers have better options in the markets of Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Taiwan (China), where they can earn higher incomes. However, Malaysia is still considered one of the top markets for Vietnamese manual labourers, as it does not demand high levels of foreign language proficiency and skills.

Regarding the goal of effectively exploiting the potential for cooperation between the two countries in the labour sector, Toàn believed that Vietnam should focus on tapping into the skilled labour market segment with high professional qualifications. He noted that this is a new aspect of cooperation between the two countries, as Malaysia is attracting significant foreign investment in the service and high-tech sectors. - Bernama-VNA

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Vietnam , Malaysia , workers , labour , cooperation

   

Next In Aseanplus News

Lives destroyed: Cases against Najib and family built on lies, says son
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Monday (Dec 23, 2024)
Thailand to raise daily minimum wage by 2.9% from Jan 1, official says
Driver in central China car ramming handed suspended death sentence
Indonesia pursuing transboundary haze control centre plan; Asean to play main role
Philippines arrests over 57,000 people in anti-drug operations in 2024; drugs worth over US$250mil seized
Vietnamese government calls for efforts to achieve 8 per cent of GDP growth in 2025
Covid-19, influenza cases under control in Malaysia, says Health Ministry
Bangladesh will no longer allow Myanmar Rohingya to enter its territory, says official
Cambodia records 54.5 per cent rise in Chinese tourist arrivals in first 11 months of 2024

Others Also Read