For the first nine months: Positive signals of the labour and employment market

28/10/2024 04:41 PM


In the first 9 months of 2024, the labour force aged 15 and over was 52.5 million, an increase of 210.6 thousand compared to the same period last year and the labour force participation rate was 68.5%.

The number of employed workers was 51.5 million, an increase of 212 thousand people compared to the same period last year.

In the third quarter of 2024, the labour force aged 15 and above reached 52.7 million, an increase of 114,100 people compared to the previous quarter and 238,800 people year-on-year, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).

For the first nine months of 2024, this figure averaged 52.5 million, with a labour participation rate of 68.5%. Employed workers totaled 51.5 million, up by 212,000 year-on-year.

The average income of workers in the third quarter was 7.6 million VND/month, an increase of 176 thousand VND compared to the previous quarter and an increase of 519 thousand VND compared to the same period last year.

Of which, the average income of male workers was 8.7 million VND/month, female workers was 6.5 million VND/month; the average income of workers in urban areas was 9.3 million VND/month, in rural areas was 6.6 million VND/month.

Employment numbers rise but labour market quality yet to improve: GSO

Illustrative image (internet)

Thus, in the first 9 months, the average income of workers was 7.6 million VND/month, an increase of 7.4%, equivalent to an increase of 519 thousand VND compared to the same period last year.

Of which, the average income of male workers was 8.6 million VND/month, female workers was 6.4 million VND; the average income of workers in urban areas was 9.2 million VND/month, in rural areas was 6.5 million VND/month.

“The labour market continues to recover, but the quality of labour supply still has many shortcomings and limitations, failing to meet the labour demand of a modern, flexible, sustainable and integrated labour market. To date, there are about 37.6 million workers remain unskilled (the whole country only has about 28.5% of workers who have received training and have certificates).

The number of workers with jobs tends to increase, but the labour market is not developing sustainably when the number of informal workers doing precarious and unstable jobs still accounts for a large proportion, about more than three-fifths of the total number of employed workers in the country” – said the GSO

MOLISA