Guests in the machine - Qatar sets up stricter labour policies
Qatar’s Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs recently released figures which suggested that worker remittances totalled a record USD 12 billion in 2014, according to bq magazine.
No breakup was given by the Ministry but foreign exchange market sources told BQ magazine money transfers made by Nepali workers may have been between USD 1 and 2 billion out a total of USD 12 billion last year.
According to Nepal embassy sources, there are an estimated 400,000 Nepalis working in Qatar and an equal number may be based in Malaysia – the two countries with the largest number of Nepali migrant workers.
Their numbers have lately been increasing in South Korea as well.
A Nepali minister recently told international media in Kathmandu that overseas Nepalis remitted nearly USD 4 billion home annually which was roughly a fifth of Nepal’s gross domestic product (GDP).
Reacting to an international rights’ group report that suggested migrant workers needed to be treated better in Qatar, the labour ministry said that migrant workers earned much less in their home countries than here.
A little earlier, local media cited a Chicago University study which suggested that GCC countries, Qatar in particular, contributed greatly to bridging the economic inequality gaps in poorer societies of South Asia and helped raise living standards as millions of their people worked in the oil-rich countries and remitted tens of billions of dollars home annually.
Analysts say that while it is true that some companies in Qatar may not be treating their workers well, this cannot be generalised for the entire private sector or the country.
It can’t be true that all migrant workers are mistreated in Qatar, said one analyst asking not to be identified.
Qatar has recently been bearing the brunt of international criticism over the treatment of migrant workers, especially Nepali workers engaged in the FIFA 2022-related development projects.
But some analysts say the criticisms smack of bias because no rights’ group or trade union has so far highlighted the issue of migrant workers and their families’ economic conditions getting better due to the remittances they send home.
Data released by the Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics show that in the past seven years, from 2008 until 2014, foreign workers transferred from Qatar a little over a staggering USD 60 billion home.
It would be safe to argue that much of this money must have gone to families in poorer societies struggling with cash.
Exact data are difficult to have but assuming that even if a tenth of this sum, which would work out to over USD 6 billion, went to Nepal, that would be a huge sum for the small country whose GDP in 2013 was estimated at close to USD 20 billion, the analyst argued.
For more on this story: bq magazine
Hi guys, so did someone get visa with Hep C positive, due to virus in the past, my friend gone thru treatment and viral load is clear, any chance to get work permit in Qatar?
brit: higher salary? seriously?
nizauddin: You will also realise that there is a queue of people waiting to take up jobs - this will continue until supply contracts
DEMAND FOR LABOURS IN THE INTERNATIONAL MARKET IS VERY VERY HIGH...SO LABOURS ARE NOT WILLING TO WORK FOR LOW WAGES...SO IT IS OUR REQUIREMENT TO TREAT THEM PROPER...IT IS NOT THE MATTER HOW MUCH MONEY THEY RECEIVED OR NOT...TO FINISH THE PROJECT WE NEED SKILLED LABOURS...AND ANALYSIS SHOWS NOT AVAILABLE...SO TREAT THEM BETTER...
6 billion in 7 years by about 400000 Nepali workers makes little more than 2000 USD per family per year.
.....no rights’ group or trade union has so far highlighted the issue... is there a room for them??
Even if they earn less in their country, the rents and cost of living in their countries are also significantly lower! The comparison is eye-washing and shows that the Ministry knows nothing about statistics.
"Reacting to an international rights’ group report that suggested migrant workers needed to be treated better in Qatar, the labour ministry said that migrant workers earned much less in their home countries than here."
So better treatment means higher salary ?