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The Committee notes the Government’s report. The Government indicates, as it has done for the past several years, that the new draft labour legislation, once it is finally adopted, will clearly spell out the principles of minimum wage-fixing in accordance with the requirements of the Convention. It also indicates that the Joint National Board, which comprises representatives of the social partners, has been set up to formulate a wages and income policy, while at present the various trade group councils are empowered to negotiate wages for unionized workers and to implement trade group agreements. The Committee requests the Government to provide additional information, including copies of any relevant legal texts, on the composition, mandate and functioning of the Joint National Board, especially as regards the method of determining or readjusting minimum wage levels. In addition, the Committee would be grateful if the Government could provide more detailed information on the activities of the trade group councils and transmit copies of any trade group agreements which may be currently in force and contain minimum wage rates for specific sectors of economic activity or groups of workers.
While recalling that the last time the Government supplied substantive information regarding the application of the Convention was in 1980, the Committee hopes that the Government will make every effort to collect and communicate in its next report full particulars on the effect given to the Convention in practice, including, for instance, statistics on the number and different occupational categories of workers covered by minimum wage regulations, information on the system of supervision and sanctions in respect of minimum wages, indications on the effect of existing minimum wage rates on the real income of workers, etc.