Employment cooperation between Vietnam and USA
24/06/2024 02:46 PM
According to ILO, Employment cooperation means Workers’ participation or involvement in decision-making, labour-management cooperation and participative or cooperative practices in an enterprise.
Under MOLISA, the resumption of the dialogue after years of interval helped Vietnam and USA share information about the labor situation in each country as well as labor cooperation and propose solutions to promoting labor-employment and social security cooperation.
While appreciating the technical and financial support from the U.S. Department of Labor, Le said these activities have contributed to helping Viet Nam to better its system of labor and social policies and improve the effectiveness of their implementation, as well as making the U.S. one of the important bilateral partners of the MOLISA.
Thea Lee, Deputy Undersecretary for International Labor Affairs at the U.S. Department of Labor, expressed her belief that the resumption of the dialogue will promote cooperation between the two countries.
At the dialogue, participants focused their discussion on reform of labor relations and technical cooperation, Viet Nam's efforts in addressing child labor and forced labor, workforce development in the digital economy, key challenges and opportunities, and safety and health at the workplace.
Vietnamese representatives updated the participants on Viet Nam's new labor policies, including the revised Labor Code (2019), the country's preparation to join conventions of the International Labor Organization, including Convention 87 and 98, and information on the implementation of the National Action Plan on Child Labor.
The U.S. side spoke highly of Viet Nam's efforts in recent years, including issues of interest to the US such as joining conventions, and child labor.
The U.S. Department of Labor also provided information on occupational safety and health, and labor in the digital economy, contributing to helping Viet Nam build orientations for occupational education development and training.
The participants also reviewed the implementation of cooperation activities between the two ministries in recent years, and proposed cooperation plans.
Lesson learnt from America
North American Agreement on labor cooperation:
The North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC) is a historic document. Signed on behalf of the United States by President Bill Clinton, of Mexico by President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, and of Canada by Prime Minister Kim Campbell in September 1993, it represents the first instance in which the United States has negotiated an agreement dealing with labor standards to supplement an international trade agreement.
The main objective of the NAALC is to improve working conditions and living standards in the United States, Mexico, and Canada as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) promotes more trade and closer economic ties among the three countries. The preferred approach of the Agreement to reach this objective is through cooperation--exchanges of information, technical assistance, consultations--a concept that is explicitly recognized in the very title of the instrument. The Agreement also provides some oversight mechanisms to ensure that labor laws are being enforced in all three countries. These oversight mechanisms are aimed at promoting a better understanding by the public of labor laws and at enhancing transparency of enforcement. The Agreement does provide the ability to invoke trade sanctions as a last resort for non-enforcement of labor law by a Party.
Structure
The Agreement creates both international and domestic institutions. The international institution is the Commission for Labor Cooperation, consisting of a Council supported by a Secretariat. The domestic institutions are the National Administrative Offices (NAOs), located in each of the countries, and national or governmental advisory committees.
The Council, which is composed of the three Cabinet-level labor officials, is the governing body of the Commission.
It has a broad mandate to work cooperatively on labor issues, including occupational safety and health, child labor, benefits for workers, minimum wages, industrial relations, legislation on the formation of unions and the resolution of labor disputes.
An independent Secretariat, which is headed by an Executive Director appointed by consensus of the three Parties for a fixed term, provides technical support to the Council.
Among the functions of the Secretariat are to report periodically to the Council on a wide range of labor issues, including labor law and administrative procedures, trends and administrative strategies related to enforcement of labor law, labor market conditions, and human resource development issues.
National Administrative Offices were created by each country to implement the Agreement and to serve as points of contact between Commission entities and national governments.
NAOs can consult with each other and exchange information on labor matters.
Each country has a right to determine the functions and powers of its own NAO and how it will be staffed.
The Agreement also allows for each country to establish national and governmental advisory committees to their NAOs.
The National Advisory Committee for the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation was established in 1995 to provide advice to the U.S. NAO on issues arising under the NAALC, and other matters as they arise in the course of administering the Agreement. The committee is comprised of 12 members, four representing the labor community, four representing the business community, two representing academia and two representing the public at large.
Coverage
Labor law is defined broadly in the Agreement, to include laws and regulations, or provisions thereof, directly related to:
Obligations
The Agreement obligates each Party to:
Cooperation and Consultation
A goal of the Agreement is to resolve issues in a cooperative manner; thus, it provides numerous opportunities for formal and informal cooperative consultations. The Agreement provides a mechanism for initial consultations to take place between the NAOs of the three Parties. Additionally, any matter within the scope of the Agreement may also be subject to consultations at the ministerial level.
Oversight of Labor Law Enforcement
Evaluations
At the request of any Party, an Evaluation Committee of Experts (ECEs), composed of independent experts, may be convened if a matter has not been resolved after ministerial consultations.
Dispute Resolution
Following consideration by the Council of an ECE report and consultations among the Parties, if a Party believes that another Party is demonstrating a persistent pattern of failure to effectively enforce its occupational safety and health, child labor or minimum wage technical standards, an arbitral panel may be established.
National administrative Office (NAO)
The NAALC calls for the establishment of a National Administrative Office (NAO) in each of the three NAFTA Parties. Each country opened its NAO on January 1, 1994. The function of the NAOs is to serve as points of contact with governmental agencies within a Party, other NAOs and the Secretariat. NAOs are required to provide information regarding the NAALC and labor law matters in the three countries to the Secretariat, other NAOs or ECEs, and the public at large.
The work of the NAO is divided into three basic areas:
Submissions Process
The North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC) requires that the NAOs provide for the receipt and review of submissions on labor law matters in the other two countries. The NAALC further delineates the types of issues that may be considered at the various resolution stages of the Agreement. The framers of the Agreement intended that disputes be addressed and settled through dialogue and cooperative consultations, initially at the NAO level and later at the ministerial level. At the NAO and ministerial level, there is a broad range of issues that may be considered for review. The jurisdictional authority is narrowed with respect to the subject matter that may be raised at subsequent levels of review, namely before ECE panels and in Arbitral panels.
The U.S. NAO, in consultation with other government agencies and the public at large, promulgated procedural guidelines for the review of submissions. Those guidelines require, among other things:
Any person may file a submission with the U.S. NAO regarding labor law matters arising in the territory of another Party. The procedural guidelines require verification of minimum standards in order to begin the review process. The submission shall address and explain, to the fullest extent possible, whether:
If the submission does not meet these minimum standards, notice may be given to the submitter that the submission is defective and the submitter may be given an opportunity to cure the defect.
In general, the Secretary shall accept a submission for review if it raises issues relevant to labor law matters in the territory of another Party and if a review would further the objectives of the Agreement.
The NAO also considers other factors in deciding whether to accept or deny a submission. The NAO may decline to accept all or part of a submission if:
The holding of a public hearing is presumed by the guidelines, unless the NAO deems that a hearing is not a suitable method to gather information. It is important to note that:
After the NAO has gathered all the necessary information, including information received as a result of consultations with the other NAOs, the submitter, companies, private consultants and testimony received at the hearing, it will issue a public report. The focus of the inquiry for purposes of the public report is to determine whether the information presented substantiates allegations that the Party in question is failing to enforce its own labor laws.
Cooperative Activities
Under the NAALC, the preferred approach in reaching its objectives is through cooperation--exchanges of information, technical assistance, and consultations. The Agreement recognizes this approach by its title and addresses it throughout the document. Thus, much of the tripartite activity focuses on cooperative activities on labor issues, principally developed and coordinated by the respective NAOs.
Article 11 of the NAALC calls for the ministerial council to promote cooperative activities between the Parties, as appropriate, regarding:
Following are examples of cooperative activities programs undertaken by the countries:
Attendees at these events come from government, business, organized labor, academic and non-government organizations.
Information Available to the Public - Reading Room
The official notice which established the U.S. NAO, published in the Federal Register on April 7, 1994, requires the following:
PV
Sickness
Work Injury and Occupational Disease
Survivor’s
Old-age
Maternity
Unemployment
Medical (Health Insurance)
Certificate of coverage
VSS - ISSA Guidelines on Social Security