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Minimum Wage Fixing Convention, 1970 (No. 131) - Bolivia (Plurinational State of) (RATIFICATION: 1977)

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The Committee notes with regret that the Government’s report has not been received. It must therefore repeat its previous observation which read as follows:

Article 1, paragraphs 2 and 3, of the Convention. Scope of application. Further to its previous comments on the exclusion of certain categories of workers from the coverage of the minimum wage legislation, the Committee notes the Government’s statement in its 2004 report that by Act No. 1715 of 18 October 1996 on agrarian reform, agricultural wage workers had come within the scope of application of the General Labour Act and that a draft Supreme Decree was expected to regulate agricultural wage work and guarantee the general application of the national minimum wage to those workers. The Committee recalls, however, that in some earlier reports the Government had stated that only sugar cane and cotton workers were not excluded from the minimum wage system and that efforts were being made to extend its application to rubber, forestry and Brazil nut workers. The Committee therefore requests the Government to clarify the situation in this regard, and to transmit a copy of the Decree on agricultural wage workers as soon as it is formally adopted.

Article 3. Determination of minimum wage level. The Committee notes that the minimum wage was last revised in 2003 by Supreme Decree No. 27048 and is presently fixed at 440 bolivianos. According to the information supplied by the Government in its last report, this amount is renegotiated every year and increases proportionately to the evolution of the consumer price index. The Government added that the national minimum wage was used for the calculation of various pay supplements and social security benefits, for instance seniority bonus and maternity allowance, and therefore had an impact on the income of most workers. In this connection, the Committee reminds the Government that the primary function of the minimum wage system envisaged in the Convention is to serve as a measure of social protection and to overcome poverty by ensuring decent minimum levels of wages especially for the low-paid, unskilled workers. Therefore, minimum rates of pay that represent only a fraction of the real needs of workers and their families, whatever their subsidiary importance in calculating certain benefits may be, can hardly fit the concept and the rationale of a minimum wage as this arises from the Convention. The Committee requests the Government to indicate the measures it intends to take to ensure that the national minimum wage fulfils a meaningful role in social policy, which implies that it should not be allowed to fall below a socially acceptable “subsistence level” and that it should maintain its purchasing power in relation to a basic basket of essential consumer goods.

Article 4, paragraph 2. Consultations with social partners. The Committee has been requesting the Government for many years to provide tangible evidence of full consultations held with the social partners with respect to fixing or readjusting minimum wage rates, as required by the provisions of the Convention. In its 2004 report, the Government indicated that no consultations with the Bolivian Labour Federation (COB) had been possible that year due to persistent claims of that organization linked to the participation of the President of the Republic in these consultations. However, negotiations had been held with different organizations at the branch level resulting in wage increases of 3 per cent in several sectors. As regards discussions on minimum wages with employers’ representatives, the Government stated that it could not enter into any such discussions with the Confederation of Private Employers of Bolivia (CEPB) since section 8 of the statutes of this organization prevented it from negotiating matters related to wages. While taking due note of these indications, the Committee wishes to emphasize once again the fundamental character of the principle of full consultation of the social partners at all stages of the minimum wage fixing procedure. According to the letter and the spirit of the Convention, the process of consultation must precede any decision-making and must be effective, that is to say it must afford the social partners a genuine opportunity to express their views and have some influence on the decisions pertaining to the matters that are the subject of consultation. While recalling that “consultation” should be kept distinct from “co‑determination” or mere “information”, the Committee considers that the Government is under the obligation to create and maintain conditions permitting the full consultation and direct participation of the most representative employers’ and workers’ organizations in all circumstances. It therefore urges the Government to take appropriate action to ensure that the requirement for meaningful consultations set forth in this Article of the Convention is effectively applied, preferably in a well-defined, commonly agreed and institutionalized form. It accordingly asks the Government to provide information on any developments concerning the establishment of the National Council on Labour Relations.

Article 5. Enforcement measures. The Committee notes that, according to the Government’s indications in its report of 2004, it intended to amend section 121 of the General Labour Act to provide for the periodic readjustment of the amount of fine to be imposed in the event of infringement of the minimum wage rates in force. The Committee requests the Government to supply up to date information in this regard.

The Committee hopes that the Government will make every effort to take the necessary action in the very near future.

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