| Literature DB >> 25995374 |
Pornpimol Kongtip1, Noppanun Nankongnab2, Chalermchai Chaikittiporn2, Wisanti Laohaudomchok3, Susan Woskie4, Craig Slatin5.
Abstract
Informal workers in Thailand lack employee status as defined under the Labor Protection Act (LPA). Typically, they do not work at an employer's premise; they work at home and may be self-employed or temporary workers. They account for 62.6 percent of the Thai workforce and have a workplace accident rate ten times higher than formal workers. Most Thai Labor laws apply only to formal workers, but some protect informal workers in the domestic, home work, and agricultural sectors. Laws that protect informal workers lack practical enforcement mechanisms and are generally ineffective because informal workers lack employment contracts and awareness of their legal rights. Thai social security laws fail to provide informal workers with treatment of work-related accidents, diseases, and injuries; unemployment and retirement insurance; and workers' compensation. The article summarizes the differences in protections available for formal and informal sector workers and measures needed to decrease these disparities in coverage.Entities:
Keywords: Occupational Safety and Health; Thailand; formal workers; informal workers; social security
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25995374 PMCID: PMC5812466 DOI: 10.1177/1048291115586036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Solut ISSN: 1048-2911