In-depth
Compulsory social insurance required for foreign workers in Vietnam starting from 2018
  • | VNS | May 26, 2017 04:00 PM
Social insurance authorities in Vietnam are developing a compulsory social insurance scheme for foreign workers in the country, citing the need to follow international practices as the country deepens integration.

An Australian English teacher at Hanoi Vocational College of High Technology.-VNA/VNS Photo Anh Tuấn

Social insurance for foreign workers was made compulsory in the Social Insurance Law 2014, “both to protect the foreign workers’ rights in Vietnam and to serve as a basis for bilateral and multilateral agreements in which workers’ rights, either Vietnamese or foreigners, are treated equally,” said Trần Đình Liệu, deputy director of the Vietnam Social Insurance (VSI) at a conference held earlier this week in Hải Phòng to discuss a draft decree on the issue.

“However, the development of the decree is facing numerous issues, such as a consensus on the insurance premium and payout rates, a mutually accessible and synchronised database between countries, as well as currency conversion and tax issues,” he said.

Trần Hải Nam, deputy head of the Social Insurance Department under the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs (MoLISA), cited the increasing number of foreign workers in Vietnam as justification for detailed legislation on obligatory social insurance.

According to Nam, the number of foreign workers in Vietnam has jumped nearly sevenfold in more than a decade, from 12,600 in 2004 to the current figure of 84,000, most of whom are highly qualified and fully registered.

The 2014 Law on Social Insurance stipulates that employees who are foreign citizen working in Vietnam with work permit or practice certificate/licence granted by a Vietnamese agency are entitled to compulsory social insurance.

Hiroshi Karashima, chairman of the Japan Business Association in Vietnam, said a distinction must be made clear between foreign workers who are obliged to join the social insurance and those who can opt out. He also called for bilateral agreements on social insurance between Vietnam and other countries so foreign workers won’t have to pay for social insurance in two countries.

According to many businesses, most labourers are on short-term employment or project-based contracts, so they would like to be able to opt for short-term coverage, like illness, maternity, and occupational accidents.

Labourers also want to know if they will receive insurance payouts quickly enough or in the currency of their choosing when their contract ends and they return home. Labourers also complained about the confusing terminology and language of the draft decree.

Phạm Thanh Du, director of VSI’s Finance and Accounting Department, said the nature of social insurance for foreign workers would require social insurance staff to have a good command of foreign languages, IT knowledge, and familiarity with international practices, all of which would require State investment.

Former MoLISA Minister Phạm Minh Huân said social insurance for foreign workers is a necessary move but would “not be easy to implement”, as it involves other countries’ laws. Bilateral agreements are a must, he said, otherwise, foreign workers would not be interested in the insurance, and the implementation would be met with resistance.

The mandatory social insurance decree for foreign workers in Vietnam is expected to take effect from the beginning of next year, 2018.

Those subject to the decree include foreign workers with employment contracts longer than one month, or those who have obtained work permits from Vietnamese authorities. These workers are required to participate in all five social insurance regimes according to the Law on Social Insurance, which would include sickness, maternity/paternity, occupational accidents or occupational hazards, retirement, and death.

Foreign workers are also eligible for lump-sum payouts.

According to the draft decree, the monthly premium would be 8 per cent of the participant’s monthly salary.

Employers are to pay 18 per cent of their employees’ monthly salary, 3 per cent into sickness and maternity/paternity insurance, 14 per cent into the retirement and death insurance, and 1 per cent into the occupational accidents insurance.

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