MOLSA Expatriate Employment Service Study Report - Opt
MOLSA Expatriate Employment Service Study Report - Opt
MOLSA Expatriate Employment Service Study Report - Opt
Report
on
The Study of Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia
Consulting Firms:
WAAS International PLC, TechnoPack Business Solutions PLC and
Nolot Professionals PLC
Table of Contents
List of Acronyms ...................................................................................................................................... 3
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... 6
3. Deliverables ........................................................................................................................................ 10
4.2.2 Labour Proclamation No. 377/2003 and the Work Permit Requirements in Force ..................... 16
6.3 Challenges and/or Problems of the Current Work Permit Service .................................................... 30
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
6.6 Assessment on Existing Requirements for Expatriate Work Permit Services ..................................... 35
8.1 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................... 45
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
List of Acronyms
Acronym Description
BoLSA - Bureau of Labour & Social Affairs
BPR - Business Process Reengineering
DP - Dependent Pass
EP - Employee Pass
ESDP - Education Sector Development Program
FDRE - Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
FGD - Focus Group Discussion
FIA - Federal Investment Agency
GTP - Growth & Transformation Plan
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
Executive Summary
Expatriate employment has both advantages and disadvantages from the host countries
points of view. If managed and regulated properly, it can have paramount importance for
the host countries in the areas of technology, knowledge and skill transfer or filling
competency and skill gaps. But, if not managed and regulated properly, it may contribute
to unemployment, deskilling of local talents/skills, security problems, capital repatriation,
brain drains of local human capital, to mention the major ones. These challenges become
more complex when it comes to developing countries like Ethiopia as globalization
motivates free movement of labour which may cause migration of less expensive local
human capital and in-flow of expatriates which are expensive in many terms. In order to
regulate the expatriate employment, institutions responsible for the service and legal
frameworks and instruments that these institutions apply are very important.
It is with this rationale that the FDRE Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, which is
mandated to regulate the expatriate employment in Ethiopia, commissioned this study
project to come up with recommended policy options to better regulate expatriate
employment to the best interest of the country. The study considers review of existing
policies, laws, regulations, directives and procedures; assessment of the status of the
current work permit service in Ethiopia; and review of best practices of other countries
with similar development stage.
Though the finding of the study reveals some realized benefits from the expatriate
employment, there are significant gaps in legislative instruments and implementation of
same. The finding reveals that the current expatriate employment service level is more
affected by implementation gaps. The root causes for implementation gaps include lack of
communication and transparency of the service provision, lack of clarity on the legal
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requirements, lack of collaboration and integration between stakeholders and key partners, lack
of established recurrent reporting and communication framework in place, lack of exhaustive
instruments to implement the directive in force, lack of disaggregated demand and supply side
labour market information that shows the skills in excess or deficit, and lack of streamlined
inspection service. In addition to the observed implementation gaps, there is no
employment policy in place and the current labour proclamation also fails to have clear
direction on how the expatriate employment shall be considered and managed. The current
expatriate work permit service is also not well aligned to the existing policies directly or
indirectly related to the service.
Therefore, for Ethiopia to benefit more from expatriate employment, attention should be
given to address the observed gaps. First of all, the current expatriate work permit service
hast to be revised in such a way that it plays its role towards realization of the GTP. This
could be materialized through formulation of national employment policy and
amendment of the current labour law to have clear direction on how to regulate and
mange the expatriate employment to better serve the service users and keep the best
interest of the country. Customization of best practices of the benchmarked countries
also helps to come-up with realistic requirements to encourage the ones with potential
benefits and discourage those with less benefit.
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1. Introduction
1.1 Background
In the current era of globalization, the world economy is moving away from the
traditional economic system (where national markets were considered as distinct entities -
which were isolated from each other by different barriers) towards a modern economic
system (where the national markets are merging into one huge global market). In effect,
the developments in the international business environment are forcing companies to
think of the world as one vast market, and thus the companies are being forced to set up
their manufacturing and marketing facilities in different foreign countries in order to do
business globally to utilize the opportunities elsewhere and survive sustainably. This
world economic merging has contributed to the movement of labour in general and
movement of expatriates across borders in particular.
Most literatures agree that expatriate employment has both advantages and disadvantages
from the perspective point of host countries. Securing transfer of technology, transfer of
knowledge and skill or filling gaps in these regards, development of management skills,
organizational development, etc are the direct expected benefits of expatriate
employment, among others. Encouraging investment, promoting good relationship
between sending and host countries, etc are the potential indirect advantages of expatriate
employment.
The problem lies on regulating the expatriate employment to the best interest of the
hosting country. If not managed properly, it may contribute to unemployment, deskilling
of local talents/skills, security problem, capital repatriation, immigration of skilled
nationals, etc. It may also forfeit the very purpose why a hosting country resorts to the
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It is in this context that the FDRE Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, which is
mandated to regulate the expatriate employment in Ethiopia, commissioned a team of
three consulting firms namely, WAAS International PLC, TechnoPack Business Solutions
PLC and Nolot Professionals Business PLC for carrying out this study project and come
up with recommended policy options to better regulate expatriate employment to the
best interest of Ethiopia.
As aforementioned, the expatriate employment has both faces; it owes critical advantages
and also owes critical disadvantages to the host countries. The scale of the benefit a
hosting county gets out of expatriate employment depends on how best the expatriate
employment is regulated and managed. This requires integrated efforts and
commitments of all stakeholders of the service such as private employers of the
expatriates, non-governmental organizations and religious organizations that employ
expatriates, government organizations that employ expatriates or regulate or have stakes
in the proper management of the expatriate service. This in turn requires getting a clear
picture of where the service is now and what has been missing to making sure that the
service provides to the country what is expected. To this end, conducting a study on this
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subject has a paramount importance. In light of this, MOLSA commissioned this study
project. Coverage wise, this study project is a sample based project that covers Tigray,
Afar, Amhara, Oromia, Southern Nations Nationalities & Peoples Region, and Addis
Ababa City Administration. The study refers only to those expatriates who are required
to possess work permit to work in Ethiopia. With these particulars, this study project has
limited scope as described below:
The study adopts both quantitative and qualitative research methods. These include review of
relevant documents, use of structured questionnaires & checklists and direct observation of the
service delivery process. The following documents are reviewed to get baseline information on
existing national and international instruments, best practices of other countries, etc.
Country’s investment policy, investment law, tax laws, labour law, national immigration
laws & directives;
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Structured questionnaires are used to collect data from employer organizations and expatriate
employees. Secondary data on employment opportunities through investment, supply side of
local skilled manpower, history data of the work permits issued so far are collected using the
formats developed for these purposes. Checklists are developed to guide both focus group
discussions and key informant interviews. The consultants visited the work permit service centre
of MOLSA to see the way the existing rules and regulations are exercised by the Ministry to
provide the service to service seekers.
Among the identified sources of data for this survey include government institutions, employer
organizations and expatriate employees of the employer organizations. Success levels of these
survey tools are presented hereunder.
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the absence of expatriates within the selected organizations during the survey period. The other
reasons include non-willingness to participate in the survey (even though not directly stated) and
non-applicability of work permit services due to bilateral agreements. As shown in table 12 (see
annex 2), out of the total organizations covered by the survey, 44% belong to the services sector
while 24% are from manufacturing industry and 16% belong to the construction industry. The
remaining 16% are sampled from mining & quarrying; electricity & water; and transport, storage
and communication industries. Therefore, the consultants believe that the sampling distribution
balances view of expatriate work permit services over the sated industries proportional to the
expected skilled manpower absorption level of the industries.
Concerning the expatriate employees, 260 expatriates issued with work permit from the 30
employer organizations were planned to be covered through the structured questionnaire
developed to collect data from this group. Out of the 260 foreign nationals sampled from the
work permit database of the Ministry, 196 (about 76%) are covered. In addition to the reasons
indicated for the deficit in coverage of employer organizations, being out of the country for
vacation/holidays, being on field works in remote areas or areas that require longer travels and
non-willingness to participate in the survey are the major reasons for the 24% deficit in coverage
on this part.
3. Deliverables
The goal of commissioning this project is to come up with policy options to establish
legal framework and working procedures on issuing work permits to expatriates and
follow-up of same. Accordingly, the major outputs of this project are indicative
conclusions which will be used as input for policy review and legislations to regulate the
expatriate work permit service to the level of expectation of all stakeholders. Two
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reports, i.e., draft and final reports will be produced. The draft report will be enriched by
a workshop to be arranged by MOLSA and will be submitted as final report.
Paradoxically, on the one hand, the population is growing fast while the industrialization
process is slower and creates only meager jobs and on the other hand, there is no enough
skilled manpower to satisfy the limited industries pushing employers to resort to
expatriate employment as a one viable policy option until the balance is locally stroked.
This is being exacerbated by the brain drain of highly trained manpower from developing
countries to the developed world out of those very few highly skilled (Lowell, 2001). This
is vividly true in the case of health professionals in Ethiopia among others.1 In
explaining extent of the brain drain, the IOM argued: “there are more Ethiopian doctors
practicing in the US city of Chicago than in Ethiopia” (Madamombe, 2006).
The Ethiopian government has committed itself to meet the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) by 2015 and to meet the country’s vision of becoming a middle-income
country in 2020 - 2023. Accordingly, the government has had formulated different
instrumental policies, strategies and programs to realize objects of poverty eradication
1
IOM is working on supporting African countries repatriate their own highly skilled manpower abroad with a
program called “The Return of Qualified African Nationals (RQAN)”. RQAN aims to develop a country’s
economy by seeking persons who are highly trained and qualified to either return or find positions in each country
that will benefit from the persons training. The RQAN is currently used by 10 African governments. Ethiopia is
among the 10 countries targeted by the RQAN IOM Program (Lowell, 2001).
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PASDEP’s main aim is to fight poverty through accelerated economic growth and
employment creation, which are primarily to be achieved by the commercialization of
agriculture and private sector development. PASDEP in general and the national TVET
strategy in particular envisages that TVET will provide the necessary “relevant and
demand-driven education and training that corresponds to the needs of the economic
and social sectors for employment and self-employment” (GTP-MOFED, 2010).
Capacity development in general and efficient utilization and development of the human
resource in particular is among the focus areas of the government strategy to materialize
its ambitious plan and achieve fast and sustainable growth and development. With the
implementation of PASDEP, the Industrial Development Strategy, and other sector
development strategies, the Ethiopian government has initiated important steps towards
economic and social development. Comprehensive capacity building and human capital
formation are key pillars in these efforts. In light of this, the study in the latter section
will discuss how the expatriate employment fits in to contributing to the success of the
strategic development plans highlighted here above.
Despite the shortfall in the skilled manpower in meeting the demands of the quietly
growing manufacturing sector of the economy, during the implementation period of
PASDEP (according to the official report of MOFED), the country has achieved high
and sustained economic growth and significant human and social development results
(Ibid).
The Industrial Development Strategy (IDS) and the Education Sector Strategy
Programme (ESDP) IV highlight the deficit in human resource in Ethiopia as a major
reason for the low state of industrial development. Leaving aside the extent of the deficit,
to a cross reference to the demand and supply side analysis section of this study, the
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argument enshrined in the IDS and ESDP IV entails two things. Firstly, it entails the
need to fill the gap at least immediately by skilled manpower from abroad, i.e., expatriate
employment, and secondly, the need to go out of dependency syndrome by building own
competence, skilled human capital that meets the need of the economy.
Subsequent to PASDEP, the Ethiopian government has formulated the Growth and
Transformation Plan (GTP) 2011-2015 to succeed the PASDEP, which ended in 2010.
In this development plan, the industrial sector is one of the priority sectors. According to
this plan, this sector is expected to take over the leading role from the agriculture sector
at the end of the executing period. It is also expected to play a significant role in
sustaining faster economic growth in the country and contribute to the establishment of
2
industry-driven development. The establishment or the expansion of the industry sector
requires skilled (trained and also experienced) manpower. Where does this skilled and
experienced manpower comes from is a question left to be addressed by the education
sector in particular and whole actors in the economy need to contribute in the human
capital building efforts. Expatriate employment is critical here at least to transfer the skill
in the newly developing manufacturing and other sectors.
2 The manufacturing sector in this period is expected to grow from its current 11 % per year to around 21 %
annually. The textile and garment, leather products, agro-processing, and metal engineering industries are given
special consideration.
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In this section, the legal and policy frameworks related to the expatriate employment are
reviewed. The labour proclamation and the subsidiary rules, the immigration rules, the
investment law, relevant tax laws among others are assessed hereunder.
The legislative historical development of expatriate employment goes back to the 1962
order no. 26/1962. The order prohibits foreign nationals from working in Ethiopia
without having the work permit from the appropriate organ of the government. Sub-
article “a” of article 15 of the Order reads: “No foreign national may be employed in
Ethiopia in any private industrial, commercial, agricultural, or other employment activity unless
he is in possession of a valid Work Permit issued by the Public Employment Administration”
(Order No. 26/1962). Sub-article “b” of the same article of the order stipulates that the
validity of employment service should not exceed 3 years while it also stipulates that the
permit can be recurrently renewed for indefinite times. Article 18 of the same law
empowers the appropriate authorities to issue regulations for the better implementation
of the service. The Order has a clear policy direction that in the absence of especial
treaty/agreement between the Ethiopian government and the other foreign country
priority and preference for employment had been provided to Ethiopian nationals if they
fulfill the skill requirement.
The 1975 labour proclamation, proclamation no. 64/1975, had also clearly stipulated the
grounds for providing work permit to a foreign national. Pursuant to sub-article ‘a’ and
‘b’ of article 21 of the proclamation, an undertaking can be allowed to employ a foreign
national on two grounds: when the required qualification is not available in Ethiopia or
when a foreign national is necessary for installation of machinery, supervision of work, or
to study a project, or to train workers. Pursuant to sub-article 2/a/ of the same article a
foreign national representing a foreign firm and wants to undertake his activity in
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Ethiopia can be provided with a work permit if his activity does not reduce the
employment opportunity of Ethiopians. Generally, the law has a clear policy direction on
what grounds work permit is provided to the expatriates. The provisions of the law have
a clear protection to the employment opportunities of the Ethiopian nationals. The law
set an obligation on the undertaking to make sure the expatriates provide training and
develop Ethiopian counterpart. The intention of this provision is to limit the cycle of
competency dependency syndrome on expatriate skill and knowledge.
The labour proclamation no. 42/1993 did not clearly outline the basic grounds of
provision of work permit to expatriates. The proclamation in general terms stated that a
foreign national must have a work permit from the Ministry to be employed in Ethiopia.
What matters is the interpretation of the laws against the general policy direction of the
government. The existing labour proclamation no. 377/2003 is a law promulgated to fit-
in and serve the free market economic policy framework. Hence, the subsidiary rules also
need to be designed in light of the overall government policy frameworks. Contents of
the labour law in force and the subsidiary regulations and rule relevant to this study are
reviewed hereunder.
The existing legal framework of expatriate employment emanates from the provisions of
the country’s labour law (as amended and with its subsidiaries regulations and rules), the
country’s investment law (as amended with its subsidiaries/regulations and rules), the law
of the land regulating the issuance of travel documents and visas and registration of
foreigners in Ethiopia (with its subsidiary and rules), among others.
3
As per proclamation no.471/2005 article 32/3/ and pursuant to the cumulative readings
of labour proclamation no.377/2003 (articles 170(1e), 172(3), 174, 177), the responsibility
of administering expatriate employment is vested on Ministry of Labour and Social
Affairs. However, pursuant to the provisions of the Investment Proclamation
(Proclamation no.280/2002), the Federal Investment Agency or the Regional Investment
organ as appropriate are provided with delegated responsibility to provide a work permit
3
Proclamation no.471/2005 is a proclamation to provide the definition of powers and duties of the
Executive Organs of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia.
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to expatriates upon the request by the foreign investors at the time of receipt of
investment license. The purpose of this delegation is to provide investors one-stop shop
service. Sub-article 1 of Article 24 of the Investment Proclamation (Proclamation no.
280/2002) reads: “The issuance of the business licenses, the granting of work permits to
expatriate employees, and the registration of business organizations as required under the
relevant laws shall … be carried out by the Authority or by Regional Investment organ as may be
appropriate, representing the competent Federal or Regional executive bodies respectively”.
Sub- article 3 of the same article requires the investment authority to undertake their
function in compliance with the appropriate laws. This entails that the authority is bound
to respect and undertake its delegated function of issuing work permit to expatriates with
a due diligence towards the requirements set forth by the appropriate laws and other
subsidiary instruments.
4.2.2 Labour Proclamation No. 377/2003 and the Work Permit Requirements in Force
The scope of the responsibilities and powers of MOLSA is determined by the provisions
proclamation no. 471/2005 and the labour proclamation no. 377/2003 as
aforementioned. Pursuant to the cumulative reading of Article 174 sub-article 1-4, Article
172 sub-article 3 and Article 170 sub-article 1/e of proclamation no. 377/2003, the
Ministry is responsible to regulate the expatriate employment in the country. The reading
of article 174 sub-article 1 stipulates that having a work permit from the Ministry is a
mandatory requirement for a foreigner to be employed for any type of work in Ethiopia.
In sub-articles 2, 3 and 4 the law determines the validity period of a work permit, the
power of the Ministry to renew or cancel the permit of an expatriate and its power to levy
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a service charge in accordance with the law for the service of issuance, renewal and
replacement of a work permit. Article 170 sub-article 1(e) of same law empowers the
Minister to issue a directive regarding the type of work which requires work permits and
the manners of issuing work permits.
Nevertheless, the labour proclamation no.377/2003 has not provided a clear direction on
the interest of the country from the expatriate employment service. It also failed to clearly
indicate the scope of application of the provisions of the law on expatriate employment
of foreign nationals. The investment law better explicitly indicates the policy interest of
the country than the labour proclamation in terms of employment of expatriates in the
country. The relevant provision to this discussion, Article 36 sub-articles 1 and 2 of the
investment law (proclamation no. 280/2002) reads as follows:
(1) “Any investor may employ duly qualified expatriate experts required for the operation of his business.”
(2)“An investor who employs expatriates pursuant to sub-article 1 of this article, shall be responsible for
replacing, within a limited period, such expatriate personnel by Ethiopians by arranging the necessary
training thereof.”
Through sub article 1, the law informs that an expatriate to be employed needs to be a
qualified expert in the area he is employed. This entails no expatriate without the required
qualification shall be provided with work permit. Sub article 2, on the other hand,
informs the policy interest of the country on skill transfer from the expatriate to the
Ethiopian counterpart.
The labour proclamation short of being clear in reflecting the policy interest of the
expatriate employment seems left to the Ministry to fill the gap in a directive. Pursuant to
sub article 1(e) of article 170 of this law, the Ministry had issued a directive (in Amharic
language) in February 2010. The directive tries to stipulate the scope of application of the
requirement of having work permit, conditions which enables the expatriate to get work
permit, manner of presenting application for work permit, the duty on the part of the
employer to make sure the expatriate trains an Ethiopian counterpart during her/his
employment period, employers and expatriate employee’s obligations, the requirements
(for new work permit, for renewal of work permit, and for replacement of work permit),
among others.
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The directive has treated some issues in detail. Whether a directive can go to determine
some of the basic issues which the law does not clearly provide delegation to the Ministry
to incorporate in the directive is contestable. Generally, the directive has some gaps. To
start with, the definition part of the directive, article 3, is not exhaustive. It also fails to
define an expatriate worker or manager, which is important in defining the scope of
application of the provisions of the law. The conditions set in article 6 of the directive,
conditions whereby an employer can hire an expatriate, in some cases not clear and some
have shortfalls. Article 7, 11, 12, 13, 15, etc have some gaps. The directive stipulates the
requirements in to different categories, i.e., for new work permit, for renewal, for
replacement, and for extending work permit as annexed herewith (see annex 1).
The experience of two African countries (Tanzania and Kenya) and two Asian countries
(Singapore and Qatar) is benchmarked. The benchmarking focuses on the basic requirements
and the administration of expatriate employment.
The expatriate employment permit in Tanzania is associated with resident permit. Resident
permits are issued to those intending to reside in the United Republic of Tanzania for business
or work or for any other acceptable purpose. The power to issue a residence permit is vested in
the Director of Immigration Services. There are three types of residence permits available in
Tanzania. These are:
Investors are required to apply for a Class A permit while foreign employees can apply for a
Class B permit. Class C permits are relevant for other categories of residents such as students
and missionaries. Applications for Class A and C permits can be forwarded directly to the
Director of Immigration Services while applications for Class B permits can be forwarded to the
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Director of Immigration Services through the Labour Commissioner. The Labour Department is
only involved in the issuance of Class B permits.
Documentary Requirements
There are different categories of requirements for the different classes of permits. Accordingly,
Certificate of Competence from the Tanzania Investment Centre (T.I.C.), Curriculum Vitae,
Educational Certificates (if appropriate), Company registration, Memorandum and articles of
association, Evidence of business premises, Sectoral approval from any relevant ministry, Share
certificate (if needed), Copy of passport to confirm nationality and validity of passport, etc are
requirements for Class A permits. Alternatively, those who do not qualify under the T.I.C.
should provide a bank proof of 300,000 USD to be considered for the Class A Permit by the
Director of Immigration Services.
Class B permit applicants are applicants who are looking for a work in Tanzania. These category
of applicants are required to produce the following documents: Letter of appointment,
Curriculum vitae, Academic qualifications (preferably copies of diplomas), Job description for
each individual expatriate, organizational structure of a company showing clearly the number and
types of posts filled in or lined up for expatriates, Letter of clearance from the Government for
anyone to be employed in a parastatal organization, Membership certificates or clearances from
local professional bodies for testing and monitoring the professional integrity of expatriates ,i.e.,
doctors, lawyers, nurses, engineers, pilots, surveyors, accountants and the like, Employment
contract, Photocopy of passport pages to authenticate nationality, validity, and the current
immigration status (if the applicant is already in the country), Evidence to show that the
company has tried to fill the position with a Tanzanian by producing copies of advertisements
announcing the vacancy as well as the C.V. of a Tanzanian alternative etc.
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are treated with especial requirements. They are required to provide legal authentication of
relationship to the resident (birth certificate, marriage certificate, etc).
Lessons Learnt
Generally, the Tanzanian expatriate work permit requirements clearly entail the policy interest of
the government. As one can understand from the requirements, the policy direction is that
foreigners are allowed to work in Tanzania in cases where there are no Tanzanians available for
the job. The following are best experiences drawn from this benchmarked country.
The categorization of work permits enables to put specific and realistic requirements to the
specific class of permit. This also helps to discriminately put rigorous requirement to the class of
work permit, which the country wants to discourage and to put simple requirements to other
classes of work permits where the country does not have more concern.
Lesson 2: The requirements require the authorities seek to investigate the competence and skill
of the expatriate requesting the permit. The burden of proofing no national is available for the
post to be filled by an expatriate is vested on the employer. This is good and simple to regulate.
Lesson 3: In the case of Class A work permit, the capital requirement as an alternative to
certificate of competence from the investment centre is good to discourage those pretending as
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investors and want to exploit local opportunities at the expense of nationals with their meager
investment.
Lesson 4: In the case of Class C the requirements are relatively not conservative. As the basic
purpose of this group of people is not for employment per se, making the requirements flexible
and loose does not affect the country’s interest of preserving job opportunities of
citizens/nationals. Rather it would benefit the country to encourage research, bilateral relations,
capital flow and free skill/talent transfer (like in cases of missionaries).
The Ministry of Manpower (MoM) is responsible for foreign nationals work permit in Singapore.
Particularly, the Work Pass Division (WPD) of the Ministry facilitates and regulates the
employment of foreign nationals through application of three types of work passes namely:
Employment Pass, S Pass and Work Permits as described below.
Employment Pass – The Employment Pass (EP) is the main type of work permit meant for
company owners or skilled employees interested to work in Singapore. Employment passes are
applied to foreign nationals who earn a fixed monthly salary above SGD$2,500 and possess
acceptable degrees, professional qualifications, or special skills. There are two types of
Employment Passes namely: P Pass and Q Pass.
The P Pass – is for foreign nationals seeking professional, managerial, or executive and specialist
jobs. These foreign nationals are again categorized as P1 and P2.
P1 Pass – applies for applicants earning a fixed monthly salary of more than SGD$7,000.
P2 Pass – applies for applicants earning a fixed monthly salary of more than SGD$3,500 and up
to SGD$7,000 and s/he possesses recognized qualifications.
The Q Pass – applies for applicants earning a fixed monthly salary of more than SGD$2,500 and
s/he possesses recognized qualifications.
S Pass – The purpose of S Pass is to increase the flexibility and responsiveness of the country’s
foreign manpower policy to meet industries’ demands for middle level skilled manpower.
Foreign nationals who earn a fixed salary of SGD$1,800 and above can apply for S Pass.
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Work Permits – Any foreigner who wishes to work in Singapore with a monthly basic salary of
not more than SGD$1,800 needs a Work Permit with the following exemptions:
(b) Dependant’s Pass (DP) holders under the Employment Pass scheme. They are, however,
required to apply for a Letter of Consent (LOC) from the Work Pass Division, Ministry of
Manpower, for employment in Singapore;
(c) Full-time matriculated or registered students who are on vacation as stated in the Work
Permit (Exemption) (Consolidation) Notification; and
(d) Full-time matriculated or registered students from approved institutes of higher learning
whose working hours do not exceed 16 hours a week as stated in Work Permit (Exemption)
(Consolidation) Notification.
In general, the number of foreign employees an employer may engage under the Work Permit
schedule is dependent on the number of local workers of the employer, and again this varies
from industry to industry. Industries are categorized into three areas, namely, Construction,
Manufacturing and Services sectors. There are accompanying levy and dependency controls for S
Pass and Work Permits to ensure that the country will obtain the desired profile of foreign
manpower. By imposing levies and limits on the number of foreign nationals a company can
employ, the country ensures that the economic objectives are met and that the total workforce,
including both local and foreign nationals, benefit from the country’s growth.
As to the service efficiency is concerned, the Singapore expatriate work service employs an
online application system in addition to the other forms of applications. Applications for work
permits can be submitted online via Work Permit Online (WPOL). The online application
system is less expensive and efficient method to both the applicant and the service provider.
Documentary Requirements
The documentary requirements also vary as per the service type required and type of profession
as described below.
For New Work Permit: In-Principle approval letter, completed application form, a copy of
applicant’s educational documents and past employment testimonials, passport-sized
photograph, a copy of travel documents (relevant part), any relevant medical documents
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together with chest X-ray and blood test reports, in some professional areas support letter from
professional associations or accredited agency, and additional requirements for regional
representatives.
For Renewal: Original e-Renewal notification letter, completed renewal application form,
applicant’s original Work Pass Card, original passport or travel documents, completed original
security bond form (optional) and employer’s authorized letter (optional).
Lessons Learnt
As the case in Tanzania, in Singapore the work permits are clustered in to different categories.
Basically, there are three types of Work permits/ work passes, namely, Employment Pass, S Pass
and Work Permit. The classifications explicitly depend on the level of earning (salary) and
implicitly depend on the qualification level. Besides, the industries are clustered into specific
groups so that the work permit administration categorically limits the number of expatriates per
industry by utilizing accompanying levies in order to obtain the desired number of foreign
manpower as per the need of the industries. Among the work permits, S pass type of work
permit is arranged to be flexibly applicable to meet the manpower requirement of the industries.
In general, the practice in Singapore is worth of being benchmarked. The following are drawn as
lesson to be customized.
Lesson 1: Categorization of work permits on the basis of fixed income (salary). This can serve
many purposes; it enables the earnings of the expatriate are disclosed at its start hence may
decrease tax evasion and the authority can know how expensive is the expatriate, among others.
Lesson 2: Flexibility and responsiveness of the expatriate employment, in particular, the S pass
permit would serve to meet demands of the industries.
Lesson 3: Permanent residents in Singapore are not required to have a wok permit. Requiring
permanent residents for work permit every time would not be fair to the foreigner, and it would
be a futile exercise for the work permit provider. Therefore, defining the limit for the
“permanent residence” and provide permanent modality of managing it would be better than
treating them like non-permanent ones.
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regulatory mechanism for the dependants of expatriates who needs to participate in the
workplace.
Lesson 5: Online application and feedback for application through different means of
communications such as public hotlines, e-mails, faxes, hardcopy correspondences and counter
services simplifies the service to the service users.
Non-Qatari workers may not be employed otherwise than after approval of the Immigration
Department and their obtaining of permits to work in the State in accordance with the rules and
procedures in force.
The work permit shall be issued to the non-Qatari subject to the following conditions:
The validity period for the work permit shall be limited to the permitted residence period so that
it may not exceed five years unless the approval of the Immigration Department is obtained.
Work permits may be obtained only by local sponsors. Employees satisfying certain criteria may
sponsor their immediate family to enable them to obtain a residence permit. Holders of work
visas require an exit permit to leave Qatar; however, their dependents do not require such a
permit while traveling abroad.
Applications for residence permits are made after arrival in Qatar through the Immigration
Department. Family dependents’ also receive residence permits, and are deemed under the
sponsorship of the family member employed in Qatar. For long-term visitor’s and residence
visas, it is necessary to complete various health and fingerprint examination procedures.
A person employed in Qatar may not work for anyone other than his or her sponsor.
Sponsorship cannot be transferred until an employee has worked with the original sponsor for at
least 2 years, and has been granted a release letter by that sponsor.
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Lessons Learnt
There is a clear protection to citizens’ job opportunities as one of the conditions is non-
availability of a qualified Qatari worker registered in the registers of the Immigration
Department.
Foreigners who want to own or run a business in Kenya need to have a work permit from the
Ministry of Immigration or Risk Deportation. There are generally two types of permits that
foreigners would apply for: Class H permit or Class A permit. The type of permit applied for
depends on whether the foreigner will be an owner of the business or simply an employee.
1. The amount of investment and its impact on Kenya’s economy, which is determined by
the auditors’ report or bank statement.
2. The number of jobs that will be created for Kenyans, which is determined by the
application letter submitted by the applicant’s agent.
3. The nationality of the applicant. An applicant has a higher chance of approval of his
application if his or her country of origin has a stronger economy than that of Kenya and
low criminal statistics and security threats.
A Class H Work Permit is applied for by foreigners who will be shareholders in the business. To
apply for a Class H Work Permit, it is necessary that the company first be registered. For certain
types of businesses, there are legal restrictions on foreign ownership either wholly or partly. For
example, there is restriction on foreigners’ engagement in petty businesses.
A foreigner may choose to apply for a Class A Work Permit where he expects to be employed by
any registered company. This is a relatively more difficult permit to get especially if the work for
which the applicant is employed is something that local expertise can meet. This stems from
ministerial policy to prevent companies from giving foreigners work which Kenyans can do.
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Documentary Requirements
Class H Work Permit: Documents that certify legality of organization of the applicant, proof of
sufficient capital, list of directors issued from the Companies Registry, a tax PIN certificate, a
duly filled application form, and certificate of payment of the prescribed fees.
Class A Work Permit: Application for an entry permit, copies of the applicant’s educational and
professional certificates, originals of the applicant’s educational and professional certificates
which the immigration office will verify and return, curriculum vitae signed and dated and a letter
from the employer explaining why the applicant is suitable for the position and why the applicant
was offered the job as opposed to a Kenyan citizen and setting out the applicant’s strengths, e.g.,
experience, training ability, qualifications, etc.
Lessons learnt
Lesson 1: Application of different classes of permits, i.e., for investors and for employment
seekers. This is good to manage them differently for the best interest of the country.
Lesson 2: Clear policy direction - restriction on foreigners’ engagement on petty business and
highly discouraging employment of foreigner while there are Kenyans who fits to the position
(the employer has to write acceptable justification).
Lesson 3: The requirements like the amount of investment and its impact, the contribution in
creating jobs for citizens, the country of origin, etc.
6. Survey Findings
As aforementioned, different methods of data collection were used to collect qualitative and
quantitative data/information from different sources. A half-day focus group discussion was
made at the Ministry of Labour & Social Affairs’ meeting hall. The composition of participants
includes representatives of government institutions, private institutions, NGOs and religious
organizations. Key informant interviews have also been organized to collect information from
work permit service providers and other government institutions that have stake on expatriate
work permit service directly or indirectly. The discussion points for focus group discussion and
key informant interview focus on the very rationales or purposes of issuing work permits to
foreign nationals, strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of the current expatriate work
permit service, potential gaps, the role of the FGD and KII participant organizations, the level
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and extent of collaboration between stakeholders, policy, legal and practical gaps and the
preferred corrective actions to bring the service to the best level it serves the country and the
service users as well, among others. Brief descriptions of survey findings are presented
hereunder.
In light of the socio-economic and political environment of the country, participants have
streamlined the context based rationale of the expatriate employment and the need for properly
regulating it. The composition of the participants was so diverse. As a result, the discussion
session was very interactive and was able to clearly scan the status of the expatriate employment
service in the country. The status of the service is presented in a SWOT matrix as strength,
weakness, opportunity, and threat. Needless to re-mention, the participants identified, debated,
and finally agreed and summarized the strengths, the weaknesses, the opportunities and the
threats as presented in the SWOT matrix table (see table 2).
As the summary of the views of the participants reveals, expatriate employment in the context of
Ethiopia has economic, political, and social rationale. These include filling skill & competency
gaps, knowledge skill & technology transfer, bilateral relations and image building, among others.
Lack of strategic focus (lack of strategic vision, lack of leadership focus and weak inter-
institutional coordination and integration), weak implementation efforts of the existing laws,
weak follow up systems and poor management of relevant data and information important to
decision making during work permit service provision are the major weaknesses spelt out to
explain the status quo.
Skilled manpower demanding development plan like the GTP and the in-flow of Foreign Direct
Investment accelerated by technological change in developed countries, among others, have been
categorized as opportunities available to be utilized. On the other hand, cultural erosion,
deskilling of local talent, capital out flow in the form of remittance or repatriation and market
intelligence (market spy by expatriates) have been considered as threats.
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Table 2: Rationale, Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats of the existing Work Permit
Services
Discussion Findings
Points
With all the identified weaknesses stated above, need to assess the perceived benefits of the
service in reference was also among the core discussion points. Reflections from both the focus
group discussions and key informant interviews show that there are observed benefits in the
areas of skill, knowledge & technology transfers, to mention the major ones. The participants
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
further indicated that the expatriate employment has contributed to increase in labour
productivity, bilateral relations with the sending countries, investment promotions & increase in
employment opportunities, improvements in working cultures, free capital & labour flows,
resource mobilization, and country’s image building, among others.
Among the potential strategies to realize benefits from expatriate work permit is designing
succession plan (to transfer skill and knowledge and curve competency dependency syndrome)
by employer organizations and implementation of same. According to the data collected and
summarized, there are expatriate employer organizations that have succession plans. In some
cases they have the plan but they do not implement it. As can be seen from table 3, out of those
who implemented the succession plans, about 37% believe that they are benefited from
expatriate employment in knowledge and skill transfer, about 22% believe that there is an
achievement in filling skill & competency gaps, and about 22% believe that there is a gain in
project implementation efficiencies. The expected benefits are also viewed from national interest
point of view. Accordingly, about 35% of the respondents believe that the country has benefited
from expatriate employment in knowledge & skill transfer, about 20% believe that skill &
competency gaps have been filled, about 13% believe that there is improvement in project
implementation efficiencies and nearly 11% indicated that there are some benefits in technology
transfers. The response on the benefits of expatriate employment in experience sharing, resource
mobilization, leveraging organization wide support is also significant (nearly 22%).
In total, about 45% of the respondents believe that employer organizations in particular and the
country in general benefited from the transfer of knowledge, skill, and technology through the
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expatriate employment service. This reveals that benefits related to transfer of skill, knowledge
and technology is the area the country benefited more according to the views of the expatriate
employer organizations’ representatives. For better understanding, findings in this part from the
employed data sources are summarized and presented in Box 1 hereunder.
In performing the day-to-day activities of the service, MOLSA and the FIA encounter challenges
because of different factors attributed to internal and external to the service providers. The
service users as well encounter challenges in the process of getting the service. As per the
reflections from the participants of the FGD and KII, the following are some of challenges the
service providers encounter.
1. Underestimation by foreign nationals of local skills, talents, and local laws related to
employment of foreign nationals.
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
8. Problem related to work permit renewal service from the view point of service users.
The FGD and KII participants have also emphasized employment contract between the
employee and the employer is a basic document and can serve as a basic information source
through which the rights and duties of each party can be clearly stipulated and can be used as a
point of reference in addition to what is stipulated in the legal and policy frameworks during
follow-up and control. Reference in this part is made to the finding as per the data collected
from employer organizations and expatriate employees. Summary of the finding is presented in
the following table.
As can be seen from table 4, 80% of the employers and 85% expatriates indicated that they sign
employment contracts. However, the place of the signing of most contracts confirmed to be
outside Ethiopia. As per the result of the survey, only 25% of the representatives of employer
organizations and only 24% of the expatriates interviewed indicated they have signed their
employment contracts here in Ethiopia. The rest 75% and 76% of the representatives of the
organizations and expatriates respectively confirmed they signed their employment contract
outside Ethiopia.
In addition, according to the service user organizations, unclear directive and requirement,
lengthy process to get support letter, integrity problem on the part of service providers and
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instability of requirements are challenges in their order of importance. The service users have
also indicated that the requirements are not clearly communicated and accessible to all. The
integrity problem indicated by about 19% of the respondents is significant and can be considered
as a big challenge.
1. Lack of clear boundary between federal & regional service providers – interpretation
depends on individual understanding.
For better attention, summary of the major challenges/problems related to the expatriate work
permit service is presented in Box 2 hereunder.
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
The consultants have made thorough discussions with the representatives of the key informant
institutions and focus group discussion participants on observed gaps related to existing laws,
policies and directives related directly or indirectly to the expatriate work permit services.
Accordingly, the following are the major gaps identified by the key informants and focus group
discussion participants.
Lack of separate law or expatriate work permit focused articles within labour proclamation no. 377/2003;
Lack of clarity on the existing directives on expatriate work permit service;
Lack of clear procedures related to work permit services to foreign nationals;
Lack of manual or guideline on industrial relation and employment service related laws applicable to expatriate
work permit service;
It is mentioned in this document that one of the core purposes of issuing work permit to foreign
nationals is filling skill gaps. To assess this part, secondary data over the period of 2005 – 2010
on enrollments and graduates is collected from the Ministry of Education as presented in tables 7
& 8 (see annex 2).
One can see from figure 1 that the supply side of local skilled manpower shows promising
increase. But the existing data on skilled manpower is not organized in a manner that one can
assess the skill areas with excess and deficit skilled manpower. On the other hand, as can be seen
from table 13 (see annex 2), the major reason indicated for employing foreign nationals is lack of
required skill & knowledge locally (about 54%) followed by lack of information on the
availability of local skilled manpower (20%). Here, one can argue that it is difficult to conclude
that supply side of local skilled manpower does have significant deficit but there is lack of
information on local skilled manpower.
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
Garduates
80000
70000
60000
50000
40000
30000
20000
10000
0
2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11
One can see from figure 2 below that about 36% of the foreign nationals are professionally from
the engineering fields and nearly 29% belong to social sciences. Those from health/medical
fields are about 14% while those from communication and information technology are fairly
above 12%. If one categorizes the proportions into two, i.e., science & technology and social
sciences & humanities as per the education policy of the country, 64.80% belong to the science
& technology fields while 35.20% belong to social sciences and humanities fields. This reveals
that demand for skilled manpower from science & technology fields has upper hand.
Agriculture/Rural Other
Dev't (Theology, etc) Health/Medicine
2.55% 6.12% 13.78%
Social
Sciences
29.08%
Engineering Fields
36.22%
Communication/IT
12.24%
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
As can be seen from figure 3 and secondary data from the work permit database (see table 10 of
annex 2), significant proportion (about 62%) of the expatriates issued with work permit possess
lower level achievements (diploma & certificate). This reveals shortfalls in enforcing the existing
requirement particularly the requirement on education.
1.16%
15.93%
33.25%
Certificate
21.14% Diploma
BA/BSC
MA/MSC
28.52% PhD
Out of the comments on requirements on experience, 28% of the comments (see table 6)
indicate that the requirements on this part should be more conservative than the existing ones.
About 32% have shown reservations on the existing support letter requirements and pointed
possible amendments. About 28% commented that their employees shouldn’t be required to
produce competency certificate and 8% indicated that competency certificates may be requested
for specific sectors like health sector. Some 28% indicated that visa validity period should be
revised in order to accommodate the lengthy processes to get work permit. More than 75% of
the respondents confirmed that the existing service charge is fair and reasonable.
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Even though the existing requirements say nothing about the manner of issuing work permit to
dependants of foreign nationals working in the country, one can see from figure 4 that fairly
above 50% of the foreign nationals employed in Ethiopia are married. This reveals demand for
clear directives & guidelines on issuance of work permit to dependants of the foreign nationals
issued with work permit.
44.91%
55.09% Single
Married
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
Both the FGD & KII sessions were not only limited to analyzing the existing situations and
identify shortfalls but also entertained discussion points in the areas of the way forward to solve
the identified service shortfalls and improve the service to the level of best expectation. In this
regard, the forwarded suggestions regarding future actions to improve the work permit service to
foreign nationals are summarized hereunder categorized into policies, laws, regulation, directives
& procedures; requirements; and systems and technologies.
1. Revise existing article under labour law 377/2003 on work permit services to foreign
nationals in such a way that it gives room for improvement to revise the existing
directives and regulations on work permit to foreign nationals.
2. Develop clear procedures on application of the existing laws & directives on work permit
services to foreign nationals.
Requirements
1. Make the existing requirements accessible in such a way that service seekers can have
complete knowledge of the requirements in force.
3. Devise and implement clear requirements for work permit service to dependants of
foreign nationals.
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1. Device and implement strong follow-up system to check realizations of the very purpose
of issuing work permits to foreign nationals (knowledge and skill transfer; filling skill and
competency gaps).
2. Create clear service boundary between federal and regional service providers; align
inspection services by MOLSA & BOLSAs.
4. Provide continuous awareness creation and capacity building training sessions on existing
laws and directives, procedures & regulations on work permit services to foreign
nationals, and implementation of same.
6. Develop framework for strong justifications on required skills that can be used as
reference for decision making on applications for work permit to foreign nationals.
8. Strengthen inspection system and controlling legal services at all appropriate places.
9. Establish registration desk of expatriate with business visa at Bole International Airport
for timely registration and follow-up.
10. Put in place the state-of-art technologies to support the process of work permit services
to foreign nationals.
7. Analysis of Findings
In this part, the consultant team analyzes the survey findings from importance of the service,
level of the service, and service shortfalls points of view.
It is an established fact that no single country is self sufficient for itself regardless of its level of
development. As stated in the background part of this study, globalization has accelerated the
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The skilled manpower required to satisfy the needs of the economy is in shortfall or it is
disproportionate. Though the information on the supply side vs. demand side of the labour
market as described under section 6.5 of this study reveals that there is lack of easily accessible
information on local skilled manpower, reflection from other information sources used for this
study shows that the labour market is in shortfall in particular when it comes to high level quality
of labour. Among the key informant interview participant organizations, Ministry of Health has
described the critical contribution of the expatriate employment in filling the competency gaps
the Ministry is encountering because of lesser supply caused by the education system and
exacerbated by the drain of physicians.
Obviously, the countries stretched development plan (the GTP) requires the labour market to
feed job-fit skilled, experienced, and competent manpower to drive the intended industrial
growth and development. However, despite the strategic shift of the education planning to the
70% science and technology and 30% social science and humanities proportion, and the TVET
strategy and the efforts being made in this regard to meet market need at least with immediate
effect, the need for the expatriate competence is pertinent to ensure the transfer of technology,
skill, knowledge and to fill competency gaps. Apart from filling the labour market shortfalls,
there are benefits the country can acquire from the expatriates employment (see section 6.2 of
this study). This entails that at this point in time or at least in the short run, expatriate
employment for Ethiopia is not a last resort but in particular to some exceptional skills, which
one cannot find internally and which the country needs to meet its development plan, would be a
strategic need. What is important is to make the service purposeful to support the development
efforts.
From the review of relevant documents, FGD and KII discussions, and the survey data from
the sampled expatriates and employer organizations, the study team is able to scan where the
service is now. The expatriate employment service is organized at case team level under one of
the directorates of MOLSA, i.e., Employment Service Promotion Directorate. This entails that
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the service has at least a unit solely responsible for the service. The service is computerized
though limited to internal use only and also has gone through BPR & implementation of same.
The organizational setup, i.e., dedication of a unit to the service, application of a work permit
database to support the service delivery, application of the outcomes of the BPR,
decentralization of the service to the expert level, etc are believed to be among the strengths of
MOLSA to provide the service in reference.
Availabilities of framed policies and strategies (like education policy, the TVET strategy),
legislative frameworks (the labour law, the investment law, and other relevant laws), conducive
opportunities for Foreign Direct Investment, government’s focus on economic diplomacy and
already established good diplomatic relations, government’s Growth and Transformation plan
and determined commitment to materialize it, etc are opportunities for MOLSA on the one
hand, and require MOLSA to gear the expatriate work employment service to fit in and play its
part to the country’s development efforts underway on the other hand.
The experiences of benchmarked countries show that the expatriate work permit service has a
clear policy direction reflecting the interest of the country out of the service. The requirements
they stipulated in most cases have a room for flexibility to entertain particular requirements
customized per service by preserving the best interest of the host country. The experience of
Singapore and Tanzania is worthy of mentioning in this regard. In the case of Ethiopia, the
study found out that first and for most, the expatriate service lacks strategic focus (lack of
strategic vision, lack of leadership focus and weak inter- institutional coordination and
integration) as identified by the participants of the FGD and the KII participants.
The review of the previous labour laws in Ethiopian shows that there had been clear policy
reflections on expatriate employment. The 1962 order, order 26/1962 had a clear policy
direction. It stipulates that employment of expatriates is allowed in the absence of qualified
Ethiopians in the area or if the employment of the expatriate is intended to train the Ethiopians.
The 1975 labour proclamation, proclamation no. 64/1975, as well limits the employment of a
foreign national into two conditions: in the absence of qualified Ethiopian or if it is for
installation and supervision of projects. On the other hand, the current labour proclamation fails
to point out under which conditions shall the expatriate employment be considered and which
interests of the country have to be protected. The FGD and KII participants as well as
MOLSA’s relevant staffs argued that the labour proclamation in force, Proclamation no.
377/2003, has failed to be clear and informative regarding the expatriate employment, unlike the
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experiences of the benchmarked countries and the previous Ethiopian labour proclamations
described herein above. MOLSA has tried to fill this gap with a directive in force (issued in
Amharic language) though whether MOLSA has the discretion to go that extent without a clear
delegation by the proclamation to that specific scope is contentious.
The study finding from the FGD and KII reveals that weak implementation & follow-up efforts
and poor disaggregated data/information, lack of communication system among stakeholders,
lack of competency assessment mechanisms are among the identified weaknesses. In addition to
this, results of data from the sampled expatriates and employer organizations reveals that unclear
requirements, instability of requirements, and integrity problem on the part of service providers,
lengthy process from support letter providers, etc are spelt out to explain the problem areas of
the service in its totality.
Pursuant to the findings on the current shortfalls of the expatriate employment service in
Ethiopia, we learned that the shortfalls could be streamlined into two basic categories for
analysis purpose. Accordingly, some of the problems and stipulated gaps fall under policy and legal
framework related gaps or problems while other identified gaps or problems can be categorized as
implementation problems. A brief analysis of each category is presented hereunder.
In principle, policy framework precedes legal frameworks as it is believed that laws and their
subsidiaries (regulations, directives, and procedures) are instruments for implementation of the
policies. In this regard, in the context of Ethiopia, there is no employment policy in general or
expatriate employment focused in particular. In the absence of such policy, other relevant
policies or relevant laws can be taken into consideration to know the policy interest of the
government in a particular area of public functioning. In this regard, the investment law,
proclamation no. 280/2002, has a clear reflection on its interest in allowing the investors to hire
an expatriate. Pursuant to article 36 sub-article 3, the law provides an investor with unrestricted
right to hire expatriates for top management positions upon obtaining prior consent from
Federal Investment Agency. In sub-article 1 of the same provision, the law requires the investor
to make sure that the expatriate be qualified one for the operation. Besides this, sub-article 2 of
same article levies a duty on the investor to make sure that the expatriate is replaced by an
Ethiopian successor in specified period of time. To this effect, the law levies a duty on the
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
investor to make sure that the expatriate trains an Ethiopian counterpart. The reading of article
36 of the investment law has two important messages: the first message is the interest to
encourage investors and develop their confidence on the management of their business while the
second message is the long-range interest, i.e., the replacement of expatriates by Ethiopians. On
the other hand, proclamation no.377/2003 does not clearly inform its interest on expatriate
employment. Therefore, the investment law is more informative than the labour law in force.
The directive issued pursuant to the current labour proclamation sets out the requirements of
expatriate work permits. The review of the directive by the study team spelt out some shortfalls
as listed below.
2. The conditions set in article 6 of the directive are not clear or have some gaps. The
provision sets out the preconditions whereby an employer can log a request to hire an
expatriate.
b. Sub-article 2 of the directive stipulates that when an expatriate intends to work for
an NGO, the importance of his/her employment has to be first confirmed. But,
how this can be evaluated is not clear.
3. Article 8 requires the employer organizations to report on the training of the Ethiopian
counterpart by the expatriate. However, the provision fails to specify the time of
reporting.
4. The cumulative reading of sub-article 3 and 5 of article 11 shows that the employer is in
command of the work permit. The provisions also levy on the employer organizations the
responsibility to return the work permit to the Ministry. This entails the following:
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Study on Expatriate Work Permit Service in Ethiopia, 2011
a. This narrows the right of the expatriate since the work permit ID certifies the
legality of the expatriate.
b. The intention of keeping the work permit ID with employer is to restrict the
expatriate from moving away from the employer or to restrict the expatriate from
trying to work for other employers. This has to be managed through control and
inspection; otherwise, giving such controlling power to the employer against the
very liberty of movement on the part of the expatriate may be termed as having
some element of bonded labour, which is unacceptable by any of the international
labor organization instruments and international instruments of human rights.
c. The study team observed the fact that the expatriates do not keep their work
permit IDs with themselves due to reasons mentioned in b above. This may
backfire and contributes to the expansion of unlawful expatriate employments as
it is not possible for an authorized person to differentiate the legal ones from the
illegal ones while undertaking inspection services.
5. Article 12 of the directive lists the obligations of the expatriate. However, the provision
does not put an obligation for training an Ethiopian counterpart which is very important
for knowledge and skill transfer.
6. Article 15 of the directive sets the conditions for which an expatriate work permit can be
extended. Among the conditions, extension is possible when an Ethiopian counterpart is
not yet able to take over the expatriate’s position. This condition may discourage the
expatriate from training an Ethiopian as training and capacitating the Ethiopian in sense
means the expatriate is pushing out himself/herself. In sub-article 2 of the same article, it
is not clear how MOLSA censures the importance and continuity of the job the expatriate
is assigned to.
Both the FGD and KII participants believe that the implementation gap outweighs the gaps
related to the legal frameworks. The implementation gap starts from lack of communication and
transparency of the service provision. The minimum starting point in this regard is
communicating and enabling the service regulator bodies (like BOLSAs), service users (the
employers and the expatriates), key partners and stakeholders to clearly understand what is
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required of each and create alignment towards the achievement of what the country expects to
get out of the service.
Despite the fact the staffs of the MOLSA claim that the stakeholders in general and BOLSAs in
particular have been communicated for the requirements stipulated in the directive in force, the
finding shows that almost all stakeholders including BOLSA staffs know less about the contents
of the directive in force. The KII participants from BOLSAs argued this lack of clarity on the
legal requirements contributed to their lesser focus to play their part in regulating the service.
Informants of the study, especially the participants from employers of the expatriates
commented that taking into consideration the service users (especially expatriates), the language
of the directive makes the directive not user friendly.
The nature of the service requires the involvement and collaboration of all relevant stakeholders.
However, the findings from the FGD and KII reveals that except the collaboration between
MOLSA and Immigration and Nationality Affairs Department, which the finding termed as
good, the collaboration and integration between MOLSA and stakeholders, even between
MOLSA and BOLSAs, is rated as weak. The BOLSAs emphasized that there is no as such
established recurrent reporting and communication channel in place.
The other implementation gap identified is lack of enabling environment to implement all what
are required. The provisions of the directive empower MOLSA to assess the preliminarily
required conditions and decide to proceed to the evaluation of the requirements (as stipulated in
article 6 of the directive). However, it has no instrument of assessing and the competence to do
so. There is also lack of disaggregated demand and supply side labour market information which
is believed enables MOLSA to know the areas of competence in deficit.
One of the root causes of irregularities committed by the employers and/or the expatriate in
relation to expatriate employment is lack of well organized inspection service. Different kinds of
irregularities have been mentioned like employing or allowing an expatriate to work without
having work permit, assigning the expatriate in a position other than what the work permit states.
Despite the fact that MOLSA and BOLSAs have the responsibility to undertake inspection on
the expatriate employment service, the finding of the study reveals that inspection in this regard
is not to the expected level and thus contributed to the irregularities in relation to expatriate
service. The finding in this regard is almost a consensus by the FGD and KII participants.
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8.1 Conclusion
The Ethiopian government has formulated policies, strategies, programs and has committed
itself to eradicate poverty and meet the Millennium Development Goals. As an instrument
towards this end, the government has endorsed its Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP). The
GTP is a stretched plan and requires the government to exert wide-range development efforts
from all actors. This requires all sectors and institutions to align efforts towards these strategic
development directions. Besides, the global situations at large levy both negative and positive
influences. What is required of a nation at this point in time is to be cautiously adjusting oneself
and fit-in within the global environment and maximize its benefit out of it. Obviously,
globalization has increased the interdependence among independent nations. One of the
manifestations of this is the inflow and outflow of technology, capital, and labour across
boundaries. Regulating this is critically important to ensure the country benefits more out of it.
As reflected in this study paper in the section dealing with benchmarking, other countries
regulate the inflow of expatriate differently with the intent to make sure they benefit most out of
the expatriate employment service.
In the context of Ethiopia pursuant to proclamation no. 471/2005 and proclamation no.
377/2003, the responsibility of administering expatriate employment is vested on the Ministry of
Labour & Social Affairs. Regulating this service requires a clear policy direction and legislative
frameworks. The policy and legislative frameworks need of course to be instrumental to serve all
government’s development efforts.
The thorough analysis of the government’s policies, strategies, and programs entails the critical
need to build the human capital. Hence, this requires knowing the place of expatriate
employment in contributing towards the country’s development efforts to achieve its
development goals and regulating it in the way it contributes to the best interests of the country.
In light of this, the finding of this study reveals that expatriate employment service is not to the
level it can contribute to the overall development efforts of the country. First and for most, one
may find and infer the country’s interest out of the expatriate employment service here and there
from different legislations and policy documents, otherwise, there is no as such employment
policy at large and expatriate employment policy in particular.
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The review of the appropriate legislative instruments entails that the investment law in force is
better informative of the policy interest of the country than the labour law in force as far as the
expatriate employment is concerned. The subsidiary of the labour law, the expatriate
employment service directive, seems to be detailed but contentious with regard to its scope.
Besides, it is not as such adequate to regulate the service to the level required to make the
country benefit most out of the service.
To draw lessons from other countries, two African and Two Asian countries’ experiences with
regard to expatriate employment have been considered in this study. The experiences of these
benchmarked countries show that there are potential lessons which Ethiopia can learn to
improve its expatriate employment service. The other focus area of the study is identifying where
the service is now. In this regard, findings of the study divulge that not only are there
implementation gaps but also the implementation gaps outweighs gaps related to the legislative
frameworks.
In general, the conclusion of this study draws that on the one hand, the expatriate employment
service intact lacks policy clarity and implementation shortfalls and on the other hand, as the
country is in a wave of development, wide-range development efforts presumably need the
service to have strategic and practical alignment with all or relevant development actors to put a
milestone in the shared efforts underway. The expatriate employment in terms of filling
competency gaps, serving the purpose of transfer of technology, skill and knowledge, could not
be the last resort but could be a strategic option at least in the short-run and be means to an end
in the long run. Therefore, the following strategic options and practical transformations are
recommended.
1. The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs shall clearly redefine its strategic roles with
respect to the employment of expatriates to contribute to the overall development efforts
of the country. This needs identifying key partners of the service and streamlining the
service to fit-in the strategic direction of the country’s development efforts.
2. There is a need for the service to have well organized and disaggregated labour market
information which clearly shows the demand and supply side of labour market balance.
To this effect, MOLSA shall work and cooperate with key stakeholders, most
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importantly, with the Ministry of Education, TVET Agency and relevant industries.
Realization of same requires MOLSA to develop a platform for the required cooperation.
3. The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs shall review the existing expatriate
employment directive to accommodate flexible and realistic requirements that serve the
needs of the economy in general and the industries in particular. The directive needs to
be user friendly and accessible to service users, regulatory bodies, key partners and other
stakeholders.
4. In order to provide the work permit renewal service at arm’s length of the service users,
the Regional Bureaus of Labour & Social Affairs shall be empowered to provide this
particular service.
5.2 Established and shared reporting mechanism between all actors of the service in
reference can add value to service efficiency. In this regard, MOLSA shall
establish a platform for periodic and recurrent reporting system between key
partners and other stakeholders.
5.3 The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs shall establish online expatriate
employment service information system that supports online application,
application processing & feedbacks, and real-time information exchange
between key partners, service users and other stakeholders.
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2. Subsequent to the issuance of the employment policy, there is a need either to amend the
labour law in force or enact a separate law which regulates the expatriate employment
service.
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6. Work permit card of the employee, (if there is no extra page of work permit
card, one passport size photo of the employee).
7. Work permit service fee, Birr 500.00 (Five Hundred Birr).
8. Report on skill and knowledge transfer to Ethiopian Counter Parts.
B. For Non Governmental Organizations
a) when an Ethiopian counterpart employee is not yet able to take over the assignment
b)If MoLSA confirms that the job of the expatriate is very important and the expat is
important as well
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Table 7: Enrollments
Year
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Program
Table 8: Graduates
Areas of Study %
Health/Medicine 13.80
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Level of Education %
Certificate 28.44%
Diploma 24.40%
BA/BSC 18.09%
MA/MSC 13.63%
PhD 1.00%
Elementary 1.46%
Secondary 9.98%
Technical/Vocational 12.68%
College 40.77%
University 21.46%
Others 1.17%
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Industry/Engagement %
Manufacturing 24.00
Construction 16.00
Reasons Number %
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References:
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Council of Ministers Regulation to Provide for the Amendment of Work Permit Fees
Regulation, Regulation No. 166/2009, Federal Negarit Gazeta of the Federal
Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, 15th Year No. 38, Addis Ababa – May 22nd,
2009.
Developmental Social Welfare Policy, Ministry of Labour & Social Affairs, 1996.
Labour Proclamation No. 377/2003, Federal Negarit Gazeta of the Federal Democratic
Republic of Ethiopia, 10th Year No. 12, Addis Ababa – 26th February, 2004.
ለውጭ አገር ዜጎች የሥራ ፈቃድ የሚሰጥበትን ሁኔታ ለመወሰን ተሻሽሎ የወጣ መመሪያ የሠራተኛና ማኅበራዊ
ጉዳይ ሚኒስቴር ጥር 2002 ዓ.ም
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