Kuwait Times, Sat, Apr 20, 2024 | Shawwal 11, 1445
Curbs on overseas hiring eased
Kuwait:
The Public Authority of
Manpower announced on Thursday the reopening of recruitment of expat manpower
from outside the country from June 1 in a move aimed at reducing the cost of
labor in the domestic market and fighting trafficking in persons. The authority
said the decision was taken during a meeting headed by Deputy Prime Minister,
Defense Minister and acting Interior minister Sheikh Fahad Al-Yousef Al-Sabah,
who also chairs the authority, and the decision becomes effective from June 1.
The new decision ends a previous decision that imposed restrictions on employers
to recruit expat manpower from outside the country in order to force them to
look for workers from the domestic market as part of measures to rebalance the
ratio of citizens and expats, who currently are at least double the size of
Kuwaitis. Kuwaiti employers were allowed to recruit manpower from outside Kuwait
under strict conditions and when the needed workers were not available in the
country.
These restrictions have dramatically increased the cost of hiring expat laborers
from the local market, which indirectly impacted prices of services in the local
market, the authority said in a statement. The decision imposes a fee of KD 150
on recruitment for the first time for each worker. It also bans the transfer of
recruited expat workers to other employers before the completion of three years
or paying a fee of KD 300 with the approval of their current employers.
The authority also said the decision aims to fight human trafficking and to help
employers carry out their activities with ease. It also aims at reducing the
cost of workers in the domestic market, especially in the contracting and
construction sectors. Since the arrival of this government, currently
functioning in the capacity of a caretaker Cabinet, about three months ago, it
has opened visit visas for expats and also resumed issuing dependent visas for
families of expats working in Kuwait, but after raising the minimum salary
condition.