HCM City (VNA) – Vietnamese workerspay little attention to improving their skills, a concern as the country isentering the Industrial Revolution 4.0, said Vice President of the VietnamGeneral Confederation of Labour Mai Duc Chinh on May 11.
Speaking at a seminar held by the Ho ChiMinh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities and theFriedrich-Ebert-Stiftung foundation, Chinh noted that only 4.9 percent oflabourers spent their unemployment benefits on vocational training courses.
He emphasised the need to raise labourers’awareness as a lack of skills will make many of them face unemployment in thenext 10 years when the Industrial Revolution 4.0 kicks in.
It is predicted that about 45 percent ofelectronic workers and 86 percent of garment workers will be outmoded duringthis revolution, he added.
Le Dang Doanh, former director of theCentral Institute for Economic Management, stated that people in productionwill inevitably be replaced by machines.
Therefore, the State and trade unions shouldsupport workers in bettering their technical skills and knowledge, Doanhsuggested.
Meanwhile, Truong Van Cam, Vice Presidentand General Secretary of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association, proposedchanges in education and training to increase labour quality.
The use of modern machines will help increaselabour productivity and improve the working environment, he said, suggestingthe State devise preferential policies for businesses which use modern machinesand maximise existing human resources.-VNA
Speaking at a seminar held by the Ho ChiMinh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities and theFriedrich-Ebert-Stiftung foundation, Chinh noted that only 4.9 percent oflabourers spent their unemployment benefits on vocational training courses.
He emphasised the need to raise labourers’awareness as a lack of skills will make many of them face unemployment in thenext 10 years when the Industrial Revolution 4.0 kicks in.
It is predicted that about 45 percent ofelectronic workers and 86 percent of garment workers will be outmoded duringthis revolution, he added.
Le Dang Doanh, former director of theCentral Institute for Economic Management, stated that people in productionwill inevitably be replaced by machines.
Therefore, the State and trade unions shouldsupport workers in bettering their technical skills and knowledge, Doanhsuggested.
Meanwhile, Truong Van Cam, Vice Presidentand General Secretary of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association, proposedchanges in education and training to increase labour quality.
The use of modern machines will help increaselabour productivity and improve the working environment, he said, suggestingthe State devise preferential policies for businesses which use modern machinesand maximise existing human resources.-VNA
VNA