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SHAPING THE FUTURE HOW CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS CAN POWER HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

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BOX 2.7:<br />

Some safer places to work<br />

Some countries have taken steps to better protect their workers. This is consistent with their rights.<br />

It also contributes to more efficient and productive workplaces.<br />

SINGAPORE:<br />

STATE-OF-<strong>THE</strong>-ART PROTECTIONS<br />

Singapore is renowned for state-of-the-art practices<br />

to protect workers’ health and safety. Three key<br />

principles define its Work and Safety Framework.<br />

The first is to mitigate and eliminate risks before<br />

they are created, minimizing accidents. The second<br />

principle is based on the idea of creating industrial<br />

ownership by engaging people from top management<br />

to factory-level workers, and generating<br />

awareness and a sense of precaution. The third<br />

principle is to strictly penalize workplaces that are<br />

unsafe, not only those that have had accidents, but<br />

also those that have unsafe practices and are prone<br />

to accidents. Penalties and fees incentivize firms<br />

to take more proactive steps, and make a business<br />

case for investing in health and safety issues.<br />

The Workers’ Safety and Health Act came into<br />

effect in 2006 and is managed under the Ministry of<br />

Manpower. To operationalize the act, the Works and<br />

Safety Framework 2018 Strategy was developed.<br />

One of its key targets is to reduce the workplace<br />

fatality rate to less than 1.8 per 100,000 workers.<br />

Considerable progress has already been made,<br />

as the fatality rate dropped from 4.9 in 2004 to<br />

2.2 in 2012.<br />

Some key initiatives of the strategy are to build<br />

capabilities to better manage workplaces. The BizSAFE<br />

programme, for instance, works with small<br />

and medium enterprises. It trains top managers on<br />

risk management strategies and the management<br />

of workers’ health and safety, while workers are<br />

educated on how to avoid hazards.<br />

The Ministry of Manpower ensures compliance<br />

with health and safety standards by undertaking<br />

inspections and managing legal enforcements.<br />

Approximately 6,500 inspections are carried out<br />

yearly. Violations are taken seriously; employers<br />

are warned, fined, prosecuted or their operations<br />

stopped where there are signs of imminent danger.<br />

When accidents do take place, work injury compensation<br />

is paid. In 2010, $76.5 million was awarded<br />

in compensation for permanent disability or death.<br />

Complementing all these efforts is an awareness<br />

campaign promoting a safe and health work culture.<br />

Award ceremonies recognize successful enterprises,<br />

and share good practices and innovative<br />

solutions. The Workers’ Safety and Health Council<br />

collects, produces and shares a repository of<br />

information and guidelines to support enterprises.<br />

CAMBODIA:<br />

LINKING TRADE AND LABOUR STANDARDS<br />

The US-Cambodia Bilateral Textile Agreement<br />

includes a labour provision that explicitly refers to<br />

internationally recognized core labour standards.<br />

To ensure compliance, the agreement states: “The<br />

Government of the United States will make a<br />

Determination [every year] whether working conditions<br />

in the Cambodia textile and apparel sector<br />

substantially comply with such labour law and<br />

[international] standards.” Until 2006, the United<br />

States granted export quota increases based<br />

on compliance.<br />

To be able to export to the United States, a garment<br />

factory had to agree to ILO inspections under<br />

its Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) programme.<br />

Those complying with national and international<br />

standards gained export increases of up to 14 percent,<br />

a strong incentive to participate. After 2006,<br />

the Royal Government of Cambodia, the country’s<br />

garment industry and trade unions requested that<br />

BFC continue to operate and safeguard worker’s<br />

interests. BFC covers areas including child labour,<br />

discrimination, forced labour, freedom of association,<br />

collective bargaining, and national labour<br />

laws and regulations on compensation, contract<br />

and workplace relations, occupational safety and<br />

health, working hours and more.<br />

Extensive factory-level data collected by the BFC<br />

has yielded several interesting findings. The programme<br />

led to higher compliance with standards,<br />

both in factories with reputation-sensitive buyers<br />

and in those without, although the former achieved<br />

higher compliance rates. Cambodian garment factories<br />

with higher levels of compliance had higher<br />

business survival rates.<br />

While concerns over wage levels and working<br />

conditions are still prevalent in Cambodia, the garment<br />

sector has the lowest rate of workplace accidents.<br />

Improved industrial relations have stemmed<br />

from better occupational health and safety, and<br />

overtime policies. A boost in wages for women<br />

in the garment industry led to a jump in women’s<br />

wages throughout Cambodia, both in absolute<br />

terms and relative to men’s wages.<br />

Based on the experience of the BFC programme,<br />

the ILO has launched the Better Work programme<br />

in a half dozen other countries, in each case on<br />

the invitation of the government, employers and<br />

workers’ organizations.<br />

74<br />

Sources: Finnish Institute of Occupational Health 2011, Better Factories Cambodia n.d., Robertson, Brown, and Ang 2011,<br />

Brown, Dehejia, and Robertson 2013, Neak and Robertson 2009.

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