Kuwait on Wednesday introduced a minimum wage of 60 dinars ($208.9) a month, in a move that affects hundreds of thousands of Asian workers. The wealthy Gulf Arab state, the world's fourth largest oil exporter, depends on unskilled foreign labour for cleaning and construction. Most Kuwaitis are employed by the public sector with generous benefits, while the private sector is dominated by foreign workers.
The state news agency KUNA said the minister of social affairs and labour, Mohammad al-Efasi, issued the order setting a minimum wage for the first time in accordance with a labour law parliament passed in December. Analysts say 60 dinars was too low and much more needed to be done to ensure justice for low paid foreigners. Many domestic helpers, who might not be covered by the new regulation, are paid less that.
"What is more important than minimum wage is ... good treatment," said Ali al-Nimesh, an economic analyst. Hundreds of maids from Asian countries run away from employers and seek refuge at their embassies every year complaining of abuse or non-payment of salaries.
Cleaners contracted to work in hospitals or government offices have demonstrated saying they went for months without pay. KUNA did not say if housemaids, whose number is estimated at around 500,000, are covered by minimum wage. Human rights activists had criticised the new labour law for not covering them when it was being deliberated in parliament.