• Dhaka Fri, 27 DECEMBER 2024,
logo

BGMEA proposes 6360 taka minimum wage for garments workers

Rtv online report

  16 Jul 2018, 00:00

The apex organization of readymade garments businessmen BGMEA proposed to fix taka 6,360 as minimum wage for the garments workers. President of the organization Siddiqur Rahman said that this wage was fixed considering the inflation.

His proposal came in at the third meeting of the minimum wage commission on Monday.

Minimum wage commission chairman Syed Aminul Islam was present in the meeting. Workers leader Begum Shamsunnahar Bhuiyan among others was present on behalf of the workers.

Proposal was made from the workers to fix 12,020 taka as the total minimum wage for the garments workers.

The new wage frame work was made considering the livelihood expense of workers, quality, production cost, inflation, types of work, risk and quality, business ability and other socio economic affairs.

Meanwhile, Garment Workers Trade Union held human chain program in front of minimum wage board office at Paltan in the capital for their demand of fixing minimum wage 16,000 taka.

BGMEA president Siddiqur Rahman said, 11 matters are considered to fix the wage of workers. No exception was made this time. We proposed wage 6,360 taka for the worker of minimum grade 7th. Later wages for other grades will be increased gradually.

Workers leader Shamsunnahar Bhuiyan said, some organizations proposed to fix minimum wage 16,000 taka and some other 18,000 taka. But in our country qualifications are not the same for all garments workers. New technologies have come in this sector. Experienced people are needed in this regard. So we want that any inexperienced person becomes jobless. Besides, capacity of providing wages for all of our factories is not the same. We hope that wage commission will consider the matters.

AH

Comments

  • Most Viewed News Of Economy
Read More
Garment Export Trends in Europe: A Resilient Performance
100 Garment Factories Shut in 6 Months, 50,000 Workers Jobless: BGMEA
Temporary Workers Leave Railway Tracks, Train Operations Resume
Saudi Offers Path to Legalization for Runaway Workers